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Solvent Recycling in an Academic Research Laboratory Steve Brehio Northeastern University Office of Environmental Health & Safety Boston, Massachusetts.

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Presentation on theme: "Solvent Recycling in an Academic Research Laboratory Steve Brehio Northeastern University Office of Environmental Health & Safety Boston, Massachusetts."— Presentation transcript:

1 Solvent Recycling in an Academic Research Laboratory Steve Brehio Northeastern University Office of Environmental Health & Safety Boston, Massachusetts

2 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference Northeastern University National research university located in Boston, Massachusetts World leader in practiced-orientated education 24,500 students 4,405 faculty and staff Three suburban campuses including Marine Science Center 41 academic buildings and 28 residence halls 440 research and teaching laboratories

3 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference Northeastern University

4 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference Needs Determination New researcher was part of the reason for a huge spike in solvent waste in late 1998 and early 1999 from a glass washing operation: Increased cost for hazardous waste disposal Increased lab waste stream volume Increased operations and scheduling problems Increased accumulation and storage constraints Needed to change to large quantity generator Recycling opportunity

5 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference Hazardous Waste Generated Northeastern University: LQGSQG

6 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference Recycling Solvents Research Laboratory Synthetic organic chemistry research laboratory – five graduate students doing numerous column washes and rinsing tasks Generating 1,200 gal/yr (1999) acetone 720 gal (4,744 lbs) ethyl acetate 240 gal (1,581 lbs) hexane 240 gal (1,581 lbs) Opportunity to Recycle 50 to 80% acetone recycled in 2000 - 360 gal (2,371 lbs) acetone, ethyl acetate and hexane recycled in 2001 - 350 gal (2,306 lbs)

7 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference Key Issues for Solvent Recycling Regulatory compliance Safety of operations Training Purchasing cost Operational cost Maintenance cost Acceptable purity of recycled product Supervision and ease of use

8 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference Solvent Recycling System Options

9 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference Unit Purchased for Synthetic Organic Chemistry Laboratory Features: No water hookup (air cool) Gravity fill system to eliminate open pouring Automatic waste drain Vapor recovery system (activated charcoal filter) Built-in spill containment Internal safety switches

10 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference Solvent Recycling System In Lab

11 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference Solvent Recycling System – Inside View

12 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference Basic Economics of Recycling Initial Purchase : $15,750 (cost sharing with Chemistry Department) Projected annual savings: $7,200 (waste disposal as lab pack) Payback approximately 2 years Savings will vary depending on disposal: lab pack, 5 gallon pail or 55 gallon drum Other Savings: $3,000 annually not having to purchase new solvent

13 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference Other Issues Recycling permit Initial fee and annual report New labeling system On-going maintenance Manufacturer warranty (approximately $1000/yr) Utility installation/operational cost Continuity of compliance programs

14 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference Hazardous Waste Generated Northeastern University: LQGSQG 2000-2001 Solvent Recycling System In Use

15 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference Hazardous Waste Generated Northeastern University: LQGSQG 2000-2001 Solvent Recycling System In Use

16 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference 2002 – What Happened? Principal investigator on sabbatical leave for one year in England. Main research group graduated and left University. Some of the new graduate students moved into different laboratory and did not embrace use of solvent recycler. EHS did not identify increased waste from new graduate students until later in 2002. New synthetic organic chemistry research group on campus

17 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference Conclusions Use of solvent recycling system in 2000 and 2001 resulted in the following: Decreased cost for disposal (after two year payback) Decreased lab waste stream volume Decreased operations and scheduling problems Decreased accumulation & storage constraints (main accumulation area serviced less frequently) Returned to small quantity generator status Recycling opportunity (waste recycled and savings on less frequent purchase of new product)

18 8/14/2003RCRA National Conference Questions? " Christie Todd Whitman, who is head of the EPA, has announced she is resigning at the end of the month. President Bush was shocked. He didn't even know we had an Environmental Protection Agency. Do you know what the EPA is? Their job is to protect the environment from President Bush." - Jay Leno "The former governor of New Jersey and the head of the environmental protection agency, Christine Todd Whitman, has resigned. Did you hear about this? Two reasons: Bush felt she was too soft on decimating pristine wilderness, and she was too hung up on that breathable air issue." - David Letterman


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