By manipulating electrical current and frequency, an electrochemical reactor provides an alternative to chlorine in disinfecting some of food processing’s nastiest water streams.

An absence of moving parts and ceramic reactor plates minimize maintenance needs and reduce the likelihood of fouling with Bioionix’s electrochemical disinfection technology. Source: Bioionix Inc.
For food exporters, the writing is on the wall in terms of future use of chlorine as a processing aid. Russian authorities recently banned the import of chlorine-rinsed poultry, adding urgency to the conversion to other oxidizers and antimicrobials in poultry chillers. One option being explored is an electrochemical process developed by BioIonix Inc.
Two Milwaukee area electrical engineers filed the first in a series of patent applications eight years ago for an “electroionic water disinfection apparatus” that would kill bacteria and other microorganisms by generating hydrogen peroxide, hydroxyl radicals and hypochlorous acid. Municipal wastewater was the inventors’ original target, but in recent years the Madison-area firm’s focus has switched to food production. A modular rack unit that expands to meet capacity demand by adding plates, much like a plate heat exchanger, was designed to meet 3A sanitary standards, and a letter of no objection was secured from USDA in October. A variety of applications are envisioned, but the most promising may be disinfecting red water from poultry chillers, in place of chlorinated water. The first commercial installation was completed in December at Gerber Poultry Inc., in Kidron, OH.
Helping guide the commercialization of BioIonix’s technology is Ajit K. Chowdhury, a chemical engineer who has spent 35 years developing and implementing systems for water treatment. He joined BioIonix in 2007 as senior development manager and brings three decades of industry experience in technology development roles. Dr. Chowdhury earned his PhD at the University of Denver in Colorado.

Ajit K. Chowdhury, senior development manager, BioIonix Inc., McFarland, WI
FE: Other electrochemical processes
are being applied to treat water in food plants. How does
electro-ionization differ from the electrolyzed oxidative process?Chowdhury:
Electrolyzed oxidation is a direct current process that relies on a
membrane in the middle, separating anode and cathode catalyzers to
create hypochlorous acid on the positive side and sodium hydroxide on
the negative. We use a hybrid, low-frequency alternating current and
don’t have a membrane, which is prone to fouling and can make the
system difficult to operate and run. That allows us to work with dirty
process water with organic load, such as red water from a poultry
chiller.
FE:
Early versions of the electroionic process generated hydrogen peroxide;
now the system produces hydroxyl radicals and other oxidizers. What
technical change did this require?Chowdhury:
High-frequency DC power was originally used when the processing system
was geared toward wastewater and effluent treatment. You have to have
some sort of converter to achieve certain goals, and low-frequency AC
power now is used instead of high frequency to generate different
oxidants.
The initial focus was on municipal wastewater
systems and the treatment of biosolids. It’s a huge market that looked
promising, but municipal plants are very slow in adopting new
technology and face lengthy approval processes. Private industry
embraces new technology much more quickly, particularly if the
technology solves a problem.
FE: Since joining the firm, on what issues have you focused?Chowdhury:
Making the system work consistently has been the biggest challenge. It
took quite a bit of development effort and experimenting with different
types of electrodes to ensure consistent performance. Stainless-steel
electrodes, aluminum and other materials were tried in bench and pilot
trials before consistency was resolved with ceramic plates.
PLC
controls had to be engineered to control the process, optimize energy
efficiencies and make adjustments as COD levels and other metrics
changed. In the discharge unit, the oxidation-reduction potential is
electronically monitored to ensure that sufficient power is being
delivered to generate the disinfectants needed to oxidize the water.
FE: What disinfectants are created in the reactor?Chowdhury:
When contaminated water enters the reactor and contacts the
high-performance electrodes placed in parallel, three powerful
“super-oxidants” are created. The fastest acting are hydroxyl radicals,
very short-lived super oxides that are more powerful than ozone. Those
radicals mutate and break down the DNA of microbes and are second only
to fluorine as an oxidant. In addition, any chloride in the water-and
there always is some-creates oxychlorides, including hypochlorous acid,
which also effectively kills microorganisms. Hypochlorite residuals
also are created, providing a longer-term kill.
Unlike a
chlorine generator, which requires the addition of lots of salt and
only treats clean water, we treat contaminated process water and
sometimes add a small amount of salt as a catalyst to improve
conductivity.
FE: Are the parallel catalytic plates an example of technology transfer from other applications?Chowdhury:
The catalytic ceramic plates that create the electrochemical reaction
are relatively new. The basic technology has been around for years, but
the plates were not sustainable because of their limited run times.
Developments
in materials of construction have changed that. Platinum metals now
coat the plates and make them much more robust. And because we’re
changing polarity with alternating current, anything that tried to
adhere to them would be flushed away with the water flow.
FE: What is the expected useful life of the plates?Chowdhury:
We haven’t run the system long enough to determine the point of
failure, but there are no moving parts; there is a 5/8th-inch gap
between plates, and our experience led us to offer a three-year
guarantee. The hope is that they will last much longer.
Maintenance is minimal. The entire module is part of the normal plant CIP process.
FE: Are there any worker-safety issues surrounding the catalyzer?Chowdhury: There are no off gases, as can occur with an ozone generator.
FE: What impact do the oxidants have on the food they contact?Chowdhury: No negative impacts have been detected in our lab and pilot trials.
The
system in place at Gerber Poultry’s Kidron, OH, facility is treating
650 gallons per minute (gpm) of red water from the poultry chiller.
They had used chlorine, then tried chlorine dioxide, but obviously they
were not happy with the results. We’re still gathering data, and there
are a lot of details to work on, but according to the folks at the
plant, there has been no affect on food texture or taste.
FE: What affect do water temperature and other variables have on chemical generation?Chowdhury:
Reactions slow as temperature declines, but the system works well at
freezing temperatures. Poultry red water tends to be just above
freezing. If fluid temperature approached 0° F, additional power and
catalytic surface could be added to get the job done.
FE: What testing has been done to quantify the system’s effectiveness?Chowdhury:
Extensive lab and pilot tests have been performed in collaboration with
Sara Lee Corp. and Alkar-Rapidpak Inc. in Lodi, WI. Sara Lee developed
the test protocol, and tests were performed at 2 gpm flow rates in our
lab and 10-20 gpm at Alkar’s pilot plant.
Deibel Laboratories in
Madison prepared Salmonella Enteritidis and Salmonella Typhimurium
cultures for 30 gallons of spent turkey chiller water from Sara Lee.
The water was held at 40