The Royal Mint has selected Analytical
Technology to equip its new effluent treatment plant.
The Royal Mint is one of the world’s
leading export mints, making coins and medals for an average of 60 countries
every year. Located in Llanstrisant, South Wales, the headquarters were opened
in 1968 by the Queen in readiness for the introduction of decimal coinage. With
a first responsibility to make and distribute United Kingdom coins, the company
employs more than 700 people and operates round-the-clock for 50 weeks a year.
With the treatment of trade effluent
increasingly coming under the spotlight, The Royal Mint recently embarked on a
multi-million pound project to build a new effluent treatment plant to replace
two existing treatment lines and support increased production capacity from two
new nickel plating lines. The new plant would need to monitor hydrogen peroxide
levels, pH and turbidity to ensure the safety of the effluent being discharged.
The new effluent treatment plant aimed
to allow the business to discharge 100% of its trade effluents into the sewer,
requiring first class monitoring instrumentation to ensure water quality. If
trade effluents are not safe to be released into a sewer , there is a
requirement for companies to either change their process to no longer produce
the effluent, treat the effluent before discharging to the sewer or pay for it
to be taken off site, each option both time consuming and costly.
The Royal Mint selected Analytical
Technology’s pH, hydrogen peroxide and turbidity sensors for its water
monitoring needs. The Q45P AutoClean pH monitor with MCERTS classification will
be used to control pH levels throughout the nickel-plating process and the pH
correction process in the new treatment plant, while the Q45H/84 hydrogen
peroxide sensors would monitor the effluent to ensure peroxide levels remained
low enough to allow efficient effluent treatment. A minimal maintenance
instrument, the ATI d15/76 AutoClean turbidity monitors were chosen to
determine water quality by measuring the degree to which the water has lost its
transparency due to the presence of suspended solids. ATi’s F12 gas detection
system was also implemented to protect employees from harmful exposure.
Graham Hartry, Environmental Manager,
Blank Processing, The Royal Mint explains: “Our new effluent treatment plant has
been built using the Best Available Technology (BAT) and will significantly
reduce the amount of effluent discharged, allowing us to recycle wherever
possible. The use of Analytical Technology’s pH, hydrogen peroxide and
turbidity monitors has allowed us to regulate the levels of chemicals and
suspended solids within our effluent discharge, ensuring that we comply with
stringent regulations and do our utmost to protect the environment.”
As a result of the new effluent
treatment plant incorporating Analytical Technology instrumentation, The Royal
Mint discharge 100 per cent of its trade effluents into the sewer, without
damaging the sewer infrastructure or the environment. Key benefits include the
instruments being easy to set-up and maintain, delivering reliable and
compliant results as well as delivering high levels of customer support to keep
the plant running.
For more information on Analytical
Technology’s range of water and gas monitoring instrumentation, please call +44(0)1457
873 318, e-mail sales@atiuk.com or visit www.analyticaltechnology.com.
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