Water restoration for package and decentralized plants

A package or decentralized plant serves a resort, a campus, or a development, and it has to meet its permit with a light crew and little redundancy. The load swings with occupancy, the neighbors are close, and a stalled reading or an odor complaint lands fast. You want a system that holds its numbers without constant attention.

The problems we see on your water

What Alchemal installs and takes responsibility for

A package or decentralized plant does the same work a municipal one does, at a smaller scale and with less to fall back on. It serves a resort, a campus, or a development, its load swings with occupancy, and it has to meet a discharge permit with a light crew. When dissolved oxygen (DO, the oxygen carried in the water) sags under a weekend load, a small basin has little headroom: the culture slows, nitrification stalls so ammonia rides through, and the plant can sour close to the people it serves. Nanobubble oxygenation keeps more of the oxygen you supply in the water, so the basin holds its setpoint through the swings. It runs continuously and needs no daily attention to do it.

The proof is operational. We baseline the dissolved oxygen and the readings the permit turns on, ammonia and the treatment numbers, then log them against that baseline through the seasons. An N-Series unit you own does the work, sized to the plant by the assessment, and where the limit is capacity or the plant’s hydraulics rather than oxygen, the assessment says so. Stewardship carries the record from there, so a small crew is not left to hold it alone.

What the published work shows, and where we need the field

The mechanism has been measured in a treatment reactor, where nanobubble aeration reached a higher removal of the organic load than a fine-bubble system. The figure, its scope line, and the limit sit on the wastewater overview, attributed to nanobubble aeration as a mechanism rather than to any Alchemal unit. Our own installations publish their own record as case files, and we are looking for sites willing to help build it on a working plant.

Proof from plant operators

The first installations for this audience are being instrumented now, and their case files publish when the record is worth reading. The methodology is already public: what we record, how we calibrate, and how we report what didn't move.

From your first note to the assessment

  1. You describe the water. A specialist reads it, replies with a plain answer, and says whether an assessment makes sense.
  2. Your water goes on the schedule. The first assessments and installations are being scheduled now; requests are answered in the order they arrive.
  3. The assessment puts a baseline on paper: dissolved oxygen top to bottom, clarity, the condition of the sediment, and a plan with a prediction attached. If oxygenation isn't the right fix, the report says so.

Questions operators ask

Our load swings with occupancy. Does that matter?

It does. A plant that fills on a weekend or a season sees its oxygen demand jump, and a small basin has little headroom. Holding oxygen steadily through the column gives it more room through a peak, which we measure over real events rather than promise.

We run with a small crew. Is this hands-on?

It runs continuously on its own once installed, feeding oxygen into the basin as it stands. Stewardship carries the seasons and the record, so the system is built to hold its numbers without daily attention from a light crew.

The neighbors are close. Will it help the odor?

Where the odor is sulfide made in water we can keep aerobic, holding oxygen shifts the biology off the path that generates it, so less comes off the surface. Hydrogen sulfide stays a recognized hazard governed by your safety procedures regardless of what the water is doing.

How does this fit our permit?

Your permit governs and we integrate with it. The readings we take, dissolved oxygen, ammonia, and the treatment numbers, are chosen to be the kind an inspector recognizes, so the record supports what you report.

Start with a conversation.

Describe the water and a specialist replies with a plain answer, before any commitment. Your water, your numbers.