March-April 2007

Getting Serious About Dust

Stricter enforcement prompts new control measures.

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By Carol Brzozowski

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Prior to using the Gorilla-Snot, Hardin says, his company’s dust control efforts involved running water trucks at about $80 an hour to keep the dust down. The mud created by that action had to be removed by street sweepers for about $75 an hour.

Photo: Midwest Industrial Supply
Preventing fugitive dust from escaping a dried-up pond

“It adds up. We are pouring a lot of concrete, so we generate a lot of dust and mud,” he says. “The Gorilla-Snot helped us because we didn’t have to water as much. You water about a third to a half, but you cut down on the water.”

In addition, it cut down on equipment and labor costs. “We don’t get the mud tracked out the back, so instead of sweeping eight hours a day, we went to a four-hour minimum,” Hardin says.

A clause in the Arizona Pollution Discharge Elimination System stormwater permit requires the developer or the contractor filing a permit to stabilize any lot or stockpile that will not be used for 14 days, says Tracy Castell, a Tucson, AZ, branch manager for WindSwept Organix.

WindSwept Organix uses MonoSol’s TerraLOC as temporary soil stabilization. The soil-penetrant dust palliative is a solution of polyvinyl alcohol and additives used for loose and dry or slightly damp surfaces.

“We like using the TerraLOC because it is much easier to clean up our equipment, and it is easier to use and more installer friendly,” Castell says.

Castell has applied the substance on the surface with both a water truck and a hydroseeding machine, depending on the terrain and the job, and sometimes will switch between the two on one job. He uses an application of 132 gallons of TerraLOC per acre, which he says is a light application, used particularly for the 14-day rule.

“Typically, we do it to meet the intent of the permit and won’t do a reapplication unless the inspector requires the developer to do so,” Castell says.

As for dust control, Castell notes that just as in Maricopa County, the county in which he operates—Pima County—is starting to crack down just as strictly on violations.

As fugitive dust flew about a Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) fly ash dredge cell in Harriman, TN, so too did complaints from nearby industrial and residential neighbors, located one-quarter- to one-half-mile away.

Brian Lankford, a program manager for coal combustion byproducts for the TVA, explains there had been a dike failure in one of the dredge cells. The TVA usually dredged to the top, with the water spilling down to the ash pond.

“During the failure, the dredge cells were basically not deep, so there was no water on the top of them and wind would blow across the top of them, capturing a lot of ash, which would blow all over the place,” Lankford says.

There was no relief. In the winter, fugitive dust was created when freezing temperatures caused the ash pond surface to freeze dry. In the summer, dust became a problem when the pond’s water either evaporated or was drained off.

The TVA used Soil-Sement polymer emulsion, manufactured by Midwest Industrial Supply, to address the problem. The product chemically bonded and sealed the surface, preventing wind from lifting fine particles and creating dust. The application was applied twice on the surface with a water truck as a temporary measure.

“It actually bound the ash together and created a small crust on the top of it, which did not allow the wind to take it to other places,” Lankford says.

The Soil-Sement was the only solution TVA considered. “We did a bit of research on binding agents and found this was the only one that offered a one-year guarantee,” he notes.

Given that, the TVA applied the product once in November 2004 and then again in October 2005. The Soil-Sement was mixed with water at a 9:1 ratio, with 1 gallon applied per 200 square feet for a total of approximately 2.5 million square feet. Although the usual application is 1 gallon per 100 square feet, using 1 gallon per 200 square feet—which was determined through an analysis of materials in Midwest Industrial’s soil lab—reduced the TVA’s costs. The application cost about $1,200 per acre.

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The TVA has used Soil-Sement in other applications. After its Paradise Fossil Plant, a coal wash plant in Drakesboro, KY, was first idled in July 2005, the fine refuse was being dumped into a pond. The pond dried up, and in March the TVA had the binding agent sprayed in the 80-acre pond.

The TVA works to maintain “no visible dust” air quality in all of its facilities, Lankford says. “We are trying to be proactive with the dust on all of our sites,” he notes. “We want to be environmentally friendly.” Next Page >

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