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| Introduction to Protection of the Environment - Water |
A plentiful supply of clean potable water is surely an essential component of a healthy living environment. However increasing living standards and population densities continue to put pressure on available water supplies, such that investment in new sources and water treatment facilities is expanding rapidly and will continue to do so for some time to come.
Whether it is to expand the purification of water from existing sources, or to bring on–stream completely new types of supply such as desalination, we find an increasing need for tubes, valves, filters and other components made from stainless steel. Its corrosion resistance is an obvious benefit for such components but so, too, are its ease of fabrication and its cleanability.
A further important consideration is the inert nature of stainless steel from a biological standpoint. Increasingly stringent water purity standards require materials that do not leach into the water significant traces of hazardous constituents.
In this section, papers and other publications describe the many ways that stainless steels help to prevent contamination of our lakes and rivers as well as to treat and distribute the water from our taps that so often we take for granted. |
| Source: International Stainless Steel Forum (ISSF) |
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| A Watertight Tunnel |
In the 1980s the municipal company, Azienda Servizi Municipalizzati (ASM), decided to exploit the excellent natural water of the Spino springs, even though they lie on the other side of a mountain. The solution was a long, wide pipe. In fact the 3,052-metre-long tunnel, which is 2.65 metres in diameter, can hold 16,800 cubic metres of water. The water flows from the tunnel into a 6,000 cubic metre capacity tank. |
| Source: Nickel Institute |
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| Dependable Operation |
There is a growing demand for stainless steel rotary-drum thickeners in the wastewater treatment industry, according to Waterlink Hycor Corp. of Lake Bluff, Illinois, U.S.A., one of at least three companies that supply the North American marketplace. To operate efficiently, municipal wastewater treatment facilities must reduce the volume of sewage sludge they store and transport prior to going to landfill. |
| Source: Nickel Institute |
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| Natural spring water |
Consumer thirst for bottled water is on the rise. In the United States alone, US$4 billion worth of domestically produced and imported bottled water -- 50.3 litres per capita -- was sold in 1998. There are nearly 1,000 producers of bottled water in that country, and most of their equipment is made with either S30400 or S31600 stainless steel |
| Source: Nickel Institute |
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| Stainless Steel for Potable Water – The Italian Experience |
Paper by Dr. V. Boneschi, Centro Inox, Milan (Italy) and Dr. A. Quazzo, SMAT S.p.A., Turin (Italy). Presented at the workshop “Stainless Steel in Drinking Water Applications”, Brussels, 19th November 2003, organised by Euro Inox with support from CEOCOR (Brussels) and GfKorr (Frankfurt/M.) Covers types of stainless steel used in the water cycle and refers to relevant hygiene, release, laws and standards. Also illustrates recent examples of applications in Italy with reference to specific case studies. |
| Source: Euro Inox |
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| Waste not... |
The next century will doubtless transform our world in ways we can't even begin to imagine. But that hasn't stopped some from predicting that, with the global population showing no signs of abating, the pressure on our natural resources will only intensify, and that the most sought-after natural resource in the twenty-first century will be water. |
| Source: Nickel Institute |
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