EROSION AND SEDIMENT AND POLLUTION CONTROL PRODUCTS USING HEAT TREATED RICE HULLS
20220062857 · 2022-03-03
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02A10/11
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B01J2220/44
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2239/0428
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J20/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2239/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
E02B3/125
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
B01J20/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J20/2804
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J20/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01J20/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J20/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J20/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
An erosion, sediment and pollution control product comprises a rice hull filler material which has been heat treated sterilizing the rice hull filler material and increasing the pollutant affinity of the rice hull filler material; and a containment member containing the rice hull filler material and allowing fluid to flow through the containment member and the rice hull filler material. The containment member is a geotextile which may include cellulose based threads treated to be hydrophobic.
Claims
1. An erosion, sediment and pollution control product comprising: A rice hull filler material which has been heat treated sterilizing the rice hull filler material and increasing the pollutant affinity of the rice hull filler material; A containment member containing the rice hull filler material and allowing fluid to flow through the containment member and the rice hull filler material.
2. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 1, wherein the containment member is a tubular mesh member.
3. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 2, wherein the tubular mesh member forms the outer perimeter of the product and the tubular member has a diameter less than 6″.
4. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 2, further including an additive, wherein the additive comprises at least one of zeolite, kenaf, activated carbon and a peat derivative.
5. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 4, wherein the additive comprises a combination of at least two of the group consisting of zeolite, kenaf, activated carbon and a peat derivative.
6. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 5, wherein the peat derivative is granular.
7. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 4, wherein the additive is present in a volume ratio from about 1:1.5 to 1:7 of the rice hull filler material.
8. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 4, wherein the additive is present in a volume ratio from about 1:20 to 1:80 of the rice hull filler material.
9. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 2, wherein the tubular mesh member exhibits a fabric flow test of at least 100 gallons per minute.
10. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 2, wherein the tubular mesh member includes cellulose based threads treated to be hydrophobic.
11. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 10, wherein the cellulose based threads includes lyocell.
12. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 10, wherein the cellulose based threads includes cotton.
13. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 10, wherein the cellulose based threads treated to be hydrophobic is treated with at least one of mineral oil, beeswax, paraffin, petroleum jelly lanolin and plant based oils.
14. An erosion, sediment and pollution control product comprising a geotextile which includes cellulose based threads treated to be hydrophobic.
15. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 14, wherein the cellulose based threads includes lyocell.
16. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 14, wherein the cellulose based threads includes cotton.
17. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 14, wherein the cellulose based threads treated to be hydrophobic are treated with at least one of mineral oil, beeswax, paraffin, petroleum jelly lanolin and plant based oils.
18. An erosion, sediment and pollution control product comprising a geotextile which includes cellulose based threads treated to be hydrophobic wherein the geotextile forms a containment member configured to contain a rice hull filler material and allowing fluid to flow through the containment member and the rice hull filler material.
19. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 18, rice hull filler material which has been heat treated sterilizing the rice hull filler material and increasing the pollutant affinity of the rice hull filler material.
20. The erosion, sediment and pollution control product according to claim 19, wherein the containment member is a tubular mesh member and wherein the tubular mesh member forms the outer perimeter of the product
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0014]
[0015]
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0016] One aspect of this invention is directed to an erosion, sediment and pollution control product 100 shown in
[0017] Rice hulls are the outer coverings of seeds, or grains, of rice. The rice hulls, also known as rice husks, protects the seed during the growing season and is formed from cellulose, specifically lignin, and other hard materials, including opaline silica. The hull is hard to eat or swallow and mostly indigestible to humans because of its enriched fiber components. The rice hull filler material 12 of the present invention is made by heat treating rice hulls.
[0018] The heat treatment of the rice hulls forming the filler material 12 will sterilize the husks, in other words it will kill the biologics in the material. Rice seeds, weed seeds, bacterium, fungus, micro-organisms are neutralized in the heat-treating process. This is important in increasing the shelf life of erosion, sediment and pollution control product 100. Without such heat treatment products 100 stored in a warehouse for long periods may experience loss due to fungal or other biologic growth. Further this sterilization process helps mitigate the migration of invasive and destructive species that might otherwise be introduced into a new environment with the use of the resulting product 100.
[0019] Additionally, the heat-treating process has been found to substantially increase the rice hull's ability to attract and maintain pollutants, particularly ionically charged pollutants, in liquid streams moving through the product 100. The heat treating process which is sufficient to sterilize the material is also believed to soften and open up the cellulose.
[0020] The preferred heat-treating process for treating the rice hulls is boiling, also (specifically for rice and rice hulls) known as parboiling. Parboiling (or leaching) is a term stemming originally from the cooking arts and, as it relates to food preparation, it is the partial or semi boiling of food as the first step in cooking. The word is from the Old French ‘parboillir’ (to boil thoroughly) but by mistaken association with ‘part’ it has acquired its current cooking definition. Parboiling is also been known to be used for removing poisonous or foul-tasting substances from foods, and to soften vegetables before roasting them. The food items are added to boiling water and cooked until they start to soften, then removed before they are fully cooked. Parboiling rice hulls will sterilize the rice hull filler material and increase the pollutant affinity of the rice hull filler material, likely by opening the cellular structure. Parboiling rice hulls represents a cost-effective method of forming the rice hull filler material 12.
[0021] Parboiling as used herein is a heat treatment or collection of heat treatments that collectively sterilize and render any residual rice kernels and other seeds non-viable. This general process includes steeping rice hulls in water at temperatures in excess of 140 degrees F. The process may include subsequent steps such as steaming under pressure to temperatures exceeding 212 degrees F. followed by hot air drying at 500 degrees F., or higher.
[0022] The containment member 30 is a tubular mesh or netting material and must have opening that are sufficient to contain the rice hull filler material 12 (together with other additives that may be present). A mesh or netting material is sufficient to contain the rice hull filler material 12 where less than 1% of the rice hulls filler material 12 pass through the netting material 30 of the product after 30 seconds of vigorous shaking of the filled product 100. Pollution control products 100 do not exhibit loss of filler in the field where they pass this manual containment test. The containment member 30 may be referenced as a tubular mesh member 30.
[0023] The tubular mesh member 30 is a geotextile and exhibits a fabric flow test of at least 100 Gallons per minute based upon the permittivity test results in the ASTM 4491 type C testing protocol (as this testing protocol exists as of Aug. 27, 2020). Permittivity is a laboratory-measured characteristic of the geotextile, expressing the flow capacity of the geotextile per unit of head. American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) D-4491, “Standard Test Methods for Water Permeability of Geotextiles by Permittivity” is the industry standard method for measuring geotextile permittivity, and this application is referencing the test as it existed on Aug. 27, 2020. This standard test is an index test and measures water flow rate through a geotextile in an isolated condition. Once permittivity is known, the flow capacity of the geotextile can be calculated for given thickness of geotextile. The tubular mesh member 30 preferably exhibits a fabric flow test of between 100 and 700 Gallons per minute, and more preferably 200-400 Gallons per minute based upon the permittivity test results in the ASTM 4491 type C testing protocol.
[0024] The tubular mesh member 30 is a geotextile which may further includes cellulose based threads treated to be hydrophobic. The natural cellulosic fibers include cotton, flax, hemp, jute, and ramie. The major man-made cellulosic fiber is rayon, a fiber produced by regeneration of dissolved forms of cellulose. One preferred cellulose based thread used in the present invention is lyocell, which is a form of rayon that consists of cellulose fiber made from dissolving pulp (bleached wood pulp) using dry jet-wet spinning. Lyocell was developed in 1972 by a team at the now defunct American Enka fibers facility at Enka, N.C. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission defines lyocell as a fiber “composed of cellulose precipitated from an organic solution in which no substitution of the hydroxyl groups takes place and no chemical intermediates are formed” and this definition is implemented herein. Lyocell threads that are treated to be hydrophobic represent a cost-effective choice of fiber for forming the member 30.
[0025] The cellulose-based threads tend to be hydrophilic and this can lead to premature degradation of the fabrics in the field for products 100. In the present invention the cellulose-based threads of member 30 may be treated to be hydrophobic, and may be treated with one of mineral oil, beeswax, paraffin, petroleum jelly, lanolin, plant-based oils, and combinations thereof.
[0026] Waxed cotton is one example of a commercially available cellulose-based thread which has been treated to be hydrophobic. Waxed cotton is cotton impregnated with a paraffin or natural beeswax based wax, woven into or applied to the cloth. Waxed cotton was popular from the 1920s to the mid-1950s and was developed from the sailing industry in England and Scotland. “Waxed thread” is also a known product and defines any thread type that includes a light coating of wax and generally used for hand stitching leather and canvas, the phrase waxed thread is not limited to cellulose based threads, and thus broader than the scope of the present invention.
[0027] Using one of, or combinations of cellulose based threads treated to be hydrophobic to form the tubular mesh member 30 results in a reduction of the use of plastic in the product and is generally favorable to the environment. Treating the cellulose-based threads to be hydrophobic, such as with treatments with at least one of mineral oil, beeswax, paraffin, petroleum jelly, lanolin and plant-based oils, is believed to increase the longevity of the product in the field to 100-1500% of the effective life of untreated threads in products 100.
[0028]
[0029] The product 100, in an alternative embodiment, may further include a clarity additive 14 to improve performance. The clarity additive 14 comprises at least one of zeolite, kenaf, activated carbon and a peat derivative. The preferred clarity additive 14 utilizes a combination of all of zeolite, kenaf, activated carbon and a peat derivative.
[0030] Zeolite is a microporous, aluminosilicate mineral commonly used as commercial adsorbent and catalyst. Zeolite has a porous structure that can accommodate a wide variety of cations, such as Na.sup.+, K.sup.+, Ca.sup.2+, Mg.sup.2+ and others which are rather loosely held and can readily be exchanged for others in a contact solution. In the preferred clarity additive 14 zeolite and kenaf form 80%+/−10% by volume of the clarity additive, with the zeolite added in a volume ratio of about 1:0.1 to 1:10 of the kenaf. The term “about” means+/−5% in this application unless otherwise specified.
[0031] Kenaf is a plant in the family Malvaceae also called Deccan hemp and Java jute. The name also applies to the fiber obtained from this plant. The fibers in kenaf are found in the bast (bark) and core (wood). The bast constitutes 40% of the plant. “Crude fiber” separated from the bast is multi-cellular, consisting of several individual cells stuck together. The individual fiber cells are about 2-6 mm long and slender. The cell wall is thick (6.3 μm). The core is about 60% of the plant and has thick (≈38 μm) but short (0.5 mm) and thin-walled (3 μm) fiber cells. The stems produce two types of fiber: a coarser fiber in the outer layer (bast fiber), and a finer fiber in the core. The bast fiber are used to make ropes. The kenaf material of the preferred clarity additive 14 is kenaf core fibers that have been harvested and dried. In the preferred clarity additive 14 zeolite and kenaf core material form roughly 80%+/−10% by volume of the clarity additive, with the kenaf core material added in a volume ratio of about 1:0.1 to 1:10 of the zeolite.
[0032] Activated carbon, also called activated charcoal, is a form of carbon processed to have small, low-volume pores that increase the surface area available for adsorption or chemical reactions. In the preferred clarity additive 14 the activated carbon is formed from coconut shells that have been baked black and the activated carbon and peat material form roughly 20%+/−10% by volume of the clarity additive 14, with the activated carbon material added in a volume ratio of about 1:0.1 to 1:10 of the peat derivative.
[0033] Reed-sedge peat is a natural, partially decomposed plant material, formed from a mixture of reeds, sedges, grasses and some hypnum mosses occurring in wetlands and containing one third to two thirds peat fibers. Reed-sedge peat has an inherent affinity for dissolved heavy metals, and reed-sedge peat is commercially available in a granular form that is easy to use. The preferred clarity additive 14 of the present invention uses granular reed-sedge peat in the amounts cited above.
[0034] In embodiments of the product 100 that implements the clarity additive 14, the amount will depend upon the primary focus of the product 100. For product 100 with a diameter of the member 30 over 6″ the product 100 will be primarily for erosion and sediment control with added pollution retention, while a diameter of less than 6″ for the member 30 will yield products 100 that are primarily focused on pollution control in runoff with some sediment retention characteristics. For product 100 with a diameter of the member 30 over 6″ the clarity additive 14, if used, is added in about 1:20 to 1:80 by volume ratio to the rice hull filler material 12. More preferably for products 100 with a diameter of the member 30 over 6″ the clarity additive 14, if used, is added in about 1:30 to 1:50 by volume ratio to the rice hull filler material 12. For product 100 with a diameter of the member 30 at or under 6″ the clarity additive 14, if used, is added in about 1:1.5 to 1:7 by volume ratio to the rice hull filler material 12. More preferably for product 100 with a diameter of the member 30 at or under 6″ the clarity additive 14, if used, is added in about 1:2 to 1:5 by volume ratio to the rice hull filler material 12.
[0035] In a further alternative of the present invention a weighting stone 15, preferably a double washed pea gravel 15, may be added in amounts of about 10-20%, and typically about 15%, by volume of the other fillers (the rice hulls 12 and, optionally, the clarity additive 14). The weighting stone 15 alternative may be implemented with or without the clarity additive 14. The weighting stone will be used in products 100 having a diameter of tubular mesh 30 at or generally under 12″.
[0036]
[0037] The hopper 20 may include devices to assist the feeding such as vibrators 22. The use of a gravity feed hopper 20 with vibration from vibrators 22 are sufficient to preliminary mix the filler 12 with other constituents (the clarity additive 14 and/or the stones 15 if either are used) for delivery to a conveying-mixing auger 24 driven by motor 26.
[0038] The auger 24 will convey and mix the filler 12 and other constituents if present to form a blended generally homogeneous mixture before it is deposited within the netting material or member 30 to form the product 100 of the invention.
[0039] A sleeve of netting material or member 30 is on the outlet tube of the conveying-mixing auger 24 and a leading end of the material 30 is pulled off of the outlet tube and sealed at 32 by a tying mechanism or closing mechanism. Simply knotting the end is typically sufficient for forming the seal or closure 32, but bands, clips, fastener may be used as well. When a sufficient length of material of member 30 has been filled with the blended filler material 12+optional additive 14 and/or stones 15) and the product 100 of the invention is the desired length for the intended usage, then the proximal end will be sealed, generally in the same method as the closure 32. The sleeve of netting material forming member 30 may be cut so that multiple products 100 may be formed from one sleeve of netting material or member 30 or the sleeve may be sized to form the necessary length of a single product.
[0040] Where the sleeve of material 30 is cut to form multiple products 100 from one sleeve of netting material 30, the proximal end of one sleeve of netting material may be reached before the end of that desired length of the product 100 being formed, in which case the filling process is halted and a new sleeve is placed onto the outlet tube by feeding the outlet tube and the partially formed product 100 through the new sleeve of material 30. The leading end of the material 30 is overlapped with the trailing end of the prior sleeve while the trailing end is still on the outlet tube and the overlapped portions are coupled together such as with a few zip-ties or the like. With the new sleeve of material 30 thus positioned the process resumes.
[0041] The present invention is not limited to filter socks. The cellulose-based threads treated with material to make them hydrophobic may be implemented in rolled erosion control blanketing, silt fence edging, and mainly in any erosion, sediment and pollution control product where longevity and bio-degradation are desired. Similarly the heat treated rice hulls, together with a suitable containment member may be implemented in other erosion, sediment and pollution control products that do not generally identify as a filter sock, such as a grate cover in which the containment member is shaped in a rectangular grate covering shape only a few inches in height.
[0042] While the invention has been shown in several particular embodiments it should be clear that various modifications may be made to the present invention without departing from the spirit and scope thereof. The scope of the present invention is defined by the appended claims and equivalents thereto.