1. On board short-time high temperature heat treatment of ballast water: a field trial under operational conditions.
- Author
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Quilez-Badia G, McCollin T, Josefsen KD, Vourdachas A, Gill ME, Mesbahi E, and Frid CL
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Animals, Bacteria isolation & purification, Hot Temperature, Phytoplankton classification, Seawater microbiology, Time Factors, Zooplankton classification, Bacterial Physiological Phenomena, Phytoplankton physiology, Ships, Waste Disposal, Fluid methods, Water Microbiology, Zooplankton physiology
- Abstract
A ballast water short-time high temperature heat treatment technique was applied on board a car-carrier during a voyage from Egypt to Belgium. Ballast water from three tanks was subjected for a few seconds to temperatures ranging from 55 degrees C to 80 degrees C. The water was heated using the vessel's heat exchanger steam and a second heat exchanger was used to pre-heat and cool down the water. The treatment was effective at causing mortality of bacteria, phytoplankton and zooplankton. The International Maritime Organization (IMO) standard was not agreed before this study was carried out, but comparing our results gives a broad indication that the IMO standard would have been met in some of the tests for the zooplankton, in all the tests for the phytoplankton; and probably on most occasions for the bacteria. Passing the water through the pump increased the kill rate but increasing the temperature above 55 degrees C did not improve the heat treatment's efficacy.
- Published
- 2008
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