Views: 0 Author: Site Editor Publish Time: 2025-07-16 Origin: Site
Hebei Huayu Environmental Engineering Co., Ltd’s Small Hospital Waste Treatment Incinerator is tailored for clinics, small hospitals, and diagnostic centers that generate biomedical waste onsite. This system ensures safe destruction of infectious materials, sharps, and pathological waste, minimizing cross‑contamination risks.
Process Flow
Waste Preparation
Autoclave integration or shredder preconditioning ensures uniform waste size and moisture content.
Primary Combustion
A refractory‑lined chamber operating at 800–1,000 °C decomposes organic waste and inactivates pathogens.
Secondary Combustion
Flue gases pass into a secondary chamber maintained at 1,100–1,300 °C, allowing complete oxidation of dioxin precursors and residual organics.
Flue‑Gas Treatment
Quench System
Rapidly cools gases to prevent formation of new toxic compounds.
Particulate Removal
A multi‑stage system combines cyclone separators and high‐efficiency bag filters.
Gas Neutralization
Dry or wet scrubbers remove acid gases and oxidize remaining organic compounds.
Control and Safety
PLC‑based automation governs temperature profiles, waste feed rates, and airflows. Interlocks prevent door opening until refractory temperatures fall below safe thresholds. Continuous‑emissions monitors for CO, NOₓ, and particulate matter verify compliance with environmental standards.
Construction Materials
Chambers use high‑alumina refractories to resist chlorine attack from PVC in medical waste. Outer casings of carbon steel are insulated with ceramic‑fiber blankets. Scrubber vessels and ductwork employ acid‑resistant alloys for long‑term durability.
Operational Advantages
Eliminates off‑site medical‐waste transport.
Reduces potential for infection spread.
Minimal footprint suitable for hospital utility areas.
Support Services
Hebei Huayu supplies comprehensive commissioning, operator training on hazardous‐waste protocols, and preventive‐maintenance schedules covering refractory repairs, filter‐bag changes, and emissions‐monitoring calibration.