Austin Installs New Wastewater Tunnel

May 23, 2013
Odor control system consists of more than 1,000 ft of fiberglass ductwork

AOC and ECS Environmental Solutions worked together to create an integral part of Austin, Texas’ complex wastewater infrastructure project. The new 3.9-mile wastewater tunnel increases capacity for the downtown district and facilitates residential and business growth in the area. An important part of the project is an odor control system.

ECS provided the odor control equipment and relied on AOC’s Vipel resin for more than 1,000 ft of fiberglass ductwork and additional accessories. The ductwork ranges in size from 12 in. to 72 in. in diameter. Approximately half of the ductwork is buried below ground and had to be able to withstand thousands of pounds of high-density traffic driving over the site. Additional elements of the project include field joint kits, flexible connectors, control and back-draft dampers, bolt gaskets and two fiberglass exhaust fans rated at 40,000 cu ft per minute (CFM).

ECS manufactured all of the fiberglass ductwork using a computerized filament winder. The fiber was impregnated with AOC’s Vipel K022 corrosion-resistant vinyl ester resin, which is ideally suited for filament winding.

“The K022 resin was the best choice for this project,” says Jeff Jones, president of ECS. “Some of the gases in the air stream are corrosive—hydrogen sulfide and ammonia. There’s also sulfuric acid. Pipes built with this resin are very resistant to what goes in them: They will not easily corrode.”

To help ease installation, ECS prefabricated and sub-assembled the duct system at its facility, then shipped it to Austin about an hour away. A field crew of five from ECS traveled to the construction site and handled all the field layup. That’s when AOC’s service became invaluable, says Jones.

“We work in a controlled environment in the shop, but in the field you are open to the elements,” says Jones. “Some of the days we were in Austin were cold and others were really hot. We had to adjust promotion levels and add inhibitors to work with the resin long enough to do a quality job under tough conditions.”

AOC’s Scott Lane, product leader, offered technical assistance that helped ECS re-formulate the resin. Eric Stuck, AOC sales representative, also assisted ECS in meeting the demands of this material-intensive project.

“With the long runs and thick pipes, we went through material much faster than normal, and AOC was very good at meeting this fluctuation in demand,” says Jones. “If we ran out of resin on this job, it would have put the project to a halt. AOC got materials here when we needed them. They were fantastic to work with!”

Sponsored Recommendations

Blower Package Integration

March 20, 2024
See how an integrated blower package can save you time, money, and energy, in a wastewater treatment system. With package integration, you have a completely integrated blower ...

Strut Comparison Chart

March 12, 2024
Conduit support systems are an integral part of construction infrastructure. Compare steel, aluminum and fiberglass strut support systems.

Energy Efficient System Design for WWTPs

Feb. 7, 2024
System splitting with adaptive control reduces electrical, maintenance, and initial investment costs.

Blower Isentropic Efficiency Explained

Feb. 7, 2024
Learn more about isentropic efficiency and specific performance as they relate to blowers.
Directory

AOC Resins

April 26, 2018