UFTO Update - Ultrapurification of Oil - Oct 7, 2004
| Wed, Feb 24 2010 11:23pm PST 1 | ||
|---|---|---|
|
Cleantech 706 Posts |
Subject: UFTO Update - Ultrapurification of Oil
Date: Thu, 07 Oct 2004
You may recall seeing this before. UFTO has introduced it up a
couple of times in the past, the last time in an UFTO Note, 5 Mar
2001. The company has a new name- ISOPur Fluid Technologies. It
now has backing from major VCs, new top management, and it's
proving itself in the marketplace. While a bit slower on the
uptake compared with some other industries, utilities are
increasingly interested in the dramatic O&M savings this
technology can demonstrate, in a wide array of applications.
The Technology
ISOPur Fluid Technologies has a unique patented technology, known
as Balanced Charge Agglomeration (BCA) that filters oil and other
non-conducting fluid to levels not achieved by conventional
filtration. Most oil filters found in automobiles, power plants,
and the like can remove particles as small as 3-10 microns.
However, half of the mass of debris and other contamination in
the oil is in particles of 1 micron or less. ISOPur splits the
oil flow into two parallel paths, and uses high voltage
electrodes to ionize the contamination particles, half positive
and half negative, thus the "balanced charge." The two paths are
combined and the oppositely charged particles are attracted to
each other and "agglomerate" to form larger particles which can
then be removed by conventional filtration.
Not only is the oil made "cleaner than new", but the process
actually removes particles and varnish from the inner workings of
machinery, dramatically extending service intervals and equipment
life.
Customer benefits in actual applications:
-- Reduced equipment downtime - scheduled and unscheduled, e.g.
reduced failures of hydraulic actuators in pulp and paper mills.
-- Reduced maintenance and repair costs, e.g. extended time
between overhauls for gas turbines.
-- Improved recycling of used oil, e.g. reprocessing and reuse of
waste vegetable oil in the production of bio-diesel fuel.
-- The cost of periodically replacing old fluids with new, e.g.
reduced frequency of changing oil in the cabs of windmills, thus
reducing transport of oil and waste oil to and from remote
locations and in structures hundreds of feet in the air.
-- Extended equipment life, e.g. near elimination of coking and
reduced wear in utility tap-changers.
The ISOPur technology can also reduce diesel fuel emissions such
as heavy metals, ash and other harmful particulate by removing
these elements at the fuel source before the fuel is combusted.
The ISOPur units also will remove bacteria from fuels, thereby
preserving the quality of fuels that are stored for extended
periods.
Fortune 500 customers include Pfizer, Wheelabrator Corp., Eaton
Corp, and alliances are underway with others spanning a wide
range of market applications - from oil recycling to on-board
vehicle systems to commercial cooking equipment.
Utility Experience The company is ready for a push with the
utility industry. Initial experience is highly encouraging. A
major southern US utility has tested the process on its Frame 7
turbines. Another Frame 7 owner in Asia is reporting that ISOPur
does much better in a direct comparison with the nearest
competitor (Kleen Tek). Several other utilities are placing
orders for a variety of applications, and a major vendor of lube
skids has entered into an OEM agreement. (Note that ISOPur can be
used to enhance the performance of existing filtration systems.)
In Italy, ENEL ran tests in the lubricating oil treatment and
control for a feed turbo-pump. They report, "we can state that
the ISOPUR MAG 600CE oil treatment machine was shown to be
effective and suitable for using in [this] machinery... Oil
treatment ... was found to be more effective than with the
presently used traditional systems. The solid particulate present
in the oil was drastically reduced and constant viscosity was
thus maintained. No deterioration in additives present in the oil
was noted." (report is on the website).
The company website has a great deal of information about the
technology, economics, and the many applications, and success
stories.
http://www.isopurfluid.com/
ISOPur Fluid Technologies, Inc. Rocky Hill, CT
Chris Sakorafos, V.P. of Marketing and Sales
860-571-8590 x231 csakorafos@isopurfluid.com
Robert P. Musselman, CEO
rmusselman@isopurfluid.com
PS: The company is in the midst of a late-stage round of
fundraising, and will be presenting at the Cleantech Venture
Forum V in Toronto, October 25-27. (contact the CEO).
http://www.cleantechventure.com/
|
|
Viewing 1 - 1 of 1
Please login or sign up to post on this network.
Click here to sign up.


