Share |

Content about Chemistry

December 4, 2012

WASHINGTON — Development of line of NPE-free detergents, zero-phosphate and zero-EDTA builders, and environmentally friendly solvent earns nod

WASHINGTON — The National Pollution Prevention Roundtable has named Washing Systems LLC (WSI) the recipient of the 2012 MVP2 Award, for the company’s “outstanding, innovative achievements in pollution prevention.”

The selection is the result of WSI’s achievement in developing the Pure Solutions Line of Green Chemistry, a complete line of NPE-free detergents, zero-phosphate and zero-EDTA builders, and BioSolve, an environmentally friendly solvent.

Candidates for the award were judged on innovation, measurable results, transferability, commitment, and optimization of available project resources.

WSI committed its organization, beginning in 2005, to develop leading-edge innovations and chemistry that has enabled customers to improve their environmental footprint and profitability. NPE-free detergents that were developed gained U.S. EPA Design for Environment (DfE) approval; WSI reports that implementation of the detergents has helped its customers reduce NPE releases by more than 4.5 million pounds annually.

A green builder, Structure, formulated to eliminate the use of phosphates and EDTA, was introduced in 2011. Also that year, WSI eliminated petroleum-based solvents from its formulas by introducing BioSolve, a non-hazardous, bio-based solvent.

“The fact that our customers have noticed improved cleaning quality, no increase in costs, and the positive environmental impact is collectively most exciting for our team,” says Roy Praechter, vice president of research and development for WSI.

The National Pollution Prevention Roundtable is a national, non-profit forum that promotes pollution-prevention efforts. Its members include state and local government programs, small-business assistance networks, industry associations, federal agencies, and more.

April 5, 2012

ROANOKE, Va. — Providing an OR towel that has little lint or is lint-free is a universal challenge for all laundry facilities that

ROANOKE, Va. — Providing an OR towel that has little lint or is lint-free is a universal challenge for all laundry facilities that supply reusable OR towels to a healthcare facility. You can take some key steps to ensure that the product coming out of processing has a minimum amount of lint.

The first is to make sure that you purchase a high-quality reusable OR towel. The quality of the weave and the fiber used in product construction has a direct bearing on the amount of lint that will be generated in processing. As a general rule, the lower the cost of the OR towel, the greater the amount of lint.

Recently, several linen companies have experienced problems with previously reliable sources, as poor-quality cotton has made its way into the production pipeline. Carefully research your options and insist on test-washing any OR towels before committing your business to a particular vendor. This is one item for which you are better off committing all your business to one vendor based on its ability to consistently provide a high-quality product.

Constant vigilance for potential product problems has become a necessary part of laundry management. Product consistency will make, not break, your reputation with your customers.

Next, make sure that reusable OR towels are processed separately from disposable (single-use) towels. Most disposable OR towels are blue in color and of a lower quality than reusable OR towels. In addition, disposable OR towels are sterilized by irradiation, which has a detrimental effect on the cotton fiber.

Because of these two factors, the amount of lint generated by disposable OR towels when washed in the laundry will be much higher than that generated by reusable OR towels. It is therefore recommended that, during the soil-sort process, these towels be sorted into a separate batch. Disposable OR towels can easily be sold to a number of industries once they are properly cleaned.

You must take care during soil sorting to ensure that no foreign objects are placed in the load with the reusable OR towels. It is normal to find pieces of gauze in the bags containing reusable OR towels. These pieces will disintegrate into white pieces of lint during processing. Removing these foreign bodies will eliminate the problem.

I recommend sorting the OR towels twice to make sure that all foreign items are removed. During the initial high-speed sort, some items normally get past the sorters who are trying hard to make production numbers. Sending the OR towels past them a second time will help them catch what they missed the first time around.

I recommend adding one or two green poly-cotton sheets to each wash load of green OR towels. Ray Pierson, one of my supervisors who used to work for National Linen, made this recommendation based on his experience there. I had my doubts at first, but decided to give it a try.

We always fully dry our OR towels before inspecting them by hand and folding them. The process of ironing a damp OR towel will cause fibers to stretch and create thermal shock, which will result in additional linting next time. We have found that the green sheets act like lint magnets when washed and dried with a load of OR towels, greatly reducing if not eliminating the lint.

We inspect each OR towel to ensure the quality of the products that are delivered to our customers. This process greatly reduces inventory management issues. If the OR towels are not inspected, then facilities will order more than they really need. Through inspection, the orders accurately reflect what they really need. Having the responsibility for inspecting OR towels done by the surgical pack room simplifies the allocation between OR packs and loose towels.

The reusable surgical linen business requires a higher quality standard than general hospital linen but, if priced appropriately, can be a great addition to your volume and your bottom line.

January 26, 2012

ALBANY, Ga. — Equinox Chemicals has announced that it has acquired Adco Cleaning Products, based in Sedalia, Mo. Terms of the acquisition were not announced.

Equinox will move Adco’s manufacturing operations to its state-of-the-art manufacturing plant in Albany, according to Yalda Harris, Equinox’s executive vice president for Global Product Management.

Dr. Jim Schreiner, Adco’s chief product technology officer, will also be relocating, she says.

Customer-service and order-taking staff will remain in Sedalia, and there will be no changes to the way customers or distributors order from Adco, Harris adds. The national sales team will remain the same.

Equinox is a specialty chemical manufacturer with specialty research, innovation, product development and commercialization capabilities that reach markets spanning the globe, the company says.

Adco manufactures a comprehensive line of specialty cleaning chemicals and detergents used in dry cleaning, commercial laundry, and janitorial and institutional cleaning applications. It offers more than 300 proprietary products through the Adco and Laidlaw brands.

“This latest acquisition will continue our aggressive strategy to revolutionize and revitalize the laundry, dry cleaning and cleaning chemical industry,” says Mark Grimaldi, CEO of Equinox Chemicals.

Mentor Partners had owned Adco since 2007.

June 27, 2011

PHILADELPHIA — The Missouri Water Environment Association (MWEA) recently honored ARAMARK Uniform Services (AUS) with the Gold Award for its commitment to preserving, protecting and improving the quality of Missouri’s water environment, ARAMARK reports.

The award recognizes the company’s compliance in managing wastewater from its Springfield-based industrial laundry facility. It is the seventh consecutive year AUS has received the honor.

“It recognizes our team’s diligence in ensuring that we reduce our environmental footprint while delivering exceptional operational results,” says Cavin Cowan, AUS general manager.

Operating five days a week, the facility processes approximately 24,000 garments each day and treats approximately 55,000 gallons of wastewater.

The treatment system includes a heat reclaimer that recovers and reuses the heat from the wastewater (wash-water temperature is heated to 160 F), reducing the plant’s gas use by 15%. In addition, a water-reuse system minimizes clean-water use by 20%, saving 2.6 million gallons per year.

April 14, 2011

“Cotton prices are incredibly high, and our textile suppliers are warning that they’ll continue to go up. Can you suggest some ways we can extend the life expectancy of the textiles that we process without completely sacrificing quality?”

Equipment/Supplies Distribution: Russ Arbuckle, Wholesale Commercial Laundry Equipment SE, Southside, Ala. — A Web-Exclusive

As the cost of cotton rises, premature linen replacement becomes a larger and more expensive issue.

February 17, 2011

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — When laundry and linen distribution managers are faced with quality issues regarding their linen products, the root cause could be their equipment, the ways the textiles are being processed, or even the textiles themselves.

November 19, 2010

WASHINGTON — The Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA) has recently taken more action to impose fines and enforce regulations concerning combustible dust and lint in laundry facilities.

This extra attention has translated into a regulatory push for higher standards and the potential for significant fines for lack of compliance.

September 8, 2010

RICHMOND, Ky. — The Association for Linen Management (ALM) is set to begin a year-long series of educational webinars next week on various laundry and linen management topics.

The live webinars will be offered at 2 p.m. Eastern time on the scheduled dates. They are available for purchase per session or in packages. The schedule includes:

September 7, 2010

SAN DIEGO — Emerald Textiles, a commercial laundry service offering textile rentals and textile management solutions for Southern California healthcare providers and hotels, will be launching operations here this fall.

Housed in a 111,000-square-foot industrial laundry facility, Emerald Textiles’ new $20 million plant exceeds Title 22 compliance standards, which helps hospitals attain accreditation from The Joint Commission, according to Tom Gildred, founder and CEO of Emerald Textiles.

August 24, 2010

ALEXANDRIA, Va. — The Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) announcement to take steps to improve the safe handling of nonylphenol ethoxylate (NPE) that stop short of banning its use in industrial laundry detergents signals the agency’s confidence in a voluntary phaseout of the detergent ingredient, the Textile Rental Services Association (TRSA) says.

August 19, 2010

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released an action plan late Wednesday afternoon to address the potential health risks of nonylphenol (NP)/nonylphenol ethoxylates (NPEs), used in industrial laundry detergents. The plan identifies a range of actions the agency is considering under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).

Meanwhile, the EPA says it supports a voluntary phaseout of industrial laundry detergents containing NPE by 2014 pledged by the Textile Rental Services Association (TRSA).

April 2, 2010

CHICAGO — “Going green” in the laundry industry can mean lots of different things. It can relate to using enviro-friendly detergents, installing certain equipment dedicated to conserving energy, or choosing specially constructed textiles. The act of laundering itself is inherently green.

Often, one can discover new ways to improve by watching what their colleagues are doing. So, this month, we’ve profiled some representative laundries of varying types to examine how they’ve made their operations “greener.”

February 2, 2010

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. — DEL Ozone, an ozone sanitization technology company, has integrated the commercial on-premise laundry (OPL) unit of the National Energy Services Co. Inc. (NESC) into its organization. The integration of NESC’s OPL team puts DEL Ozone in a position to serve a growing demand from OPL operators for energy-efficient and cost-saving solutions, according to the company.

September 18, 2009

GULF BREEZE, Fla. — Commercial and Coin Laundry Equipment Co. (CLEC), Gulf Breeze, Fla., recently won two awards for its active involvement in promoting green laundry solutions.

The commercial laundry equipment distributor won UniMac’s Top Sales Performer Award for promoting UniMac’s “Green” product line of washer-extractors and drying tumblers, as well as one of ArtiClean Ozone’s top sales awards for promoting ozone washing.

August 12, 2009

I’ve said for years that the real value of any Clean Show is the unexpected products that you find in the most unlikely places.

Normally these discoveries can be found in one of the small, 10-square-foot booths along a back wall, or in an out-of-the-way location. This year, I found a new technology that may revolutionize the laundry chemical business. And most surprisingly, I found it at the Standard Textile Co. booth.

August 7, 2009

NEW ORLEANS — Super Laundry of Ambridge, Pa., has expanded its distribution of Guardian Integrated Services’ commercial laundry products, the companies announced here during Clean ’09.

Previously, Laundry City was named Guardian’s distributor for the state of Indiana. The Ohio and Pennsylvania territories are now being serviced by Ohio Laundry, of Columbus, Ohio, and Super Laundry, respectively.

May 12, 2009

COCOA, Fla. — Guardian Manufacturing Inc. has completed its new research and development facility in Eustis, Fla.

Headed by Senior Scientist Thoram Charanda, the facility supports all Guardian Manufacturing divisions with product development, product support testing, process modeling for new applications, and process verification for existing operations.

November 26, 2008

“I’m concerned that we’re not doing all we can to handle our laundry chemicals safely. What chemicals pose the greatest hazards? How should they be stored? Are there records we should be keeping? What kind of personal protective equipment is recommended?”

Chemicals Supply: Kevin McLaren, Dober Group, Woodridge, Ill.

The topic of chemical safety, despite its importance, is all too often glossed over.

November 21, 2008

“I’m concerned that we’re not doing all we can to handle our laundry chemicals safely. What chemicals pose the greatest hazards? How should they be stored? Are there records we should be keeping? What kind of personal protective equipment is recommended?”

Commercial Laundering: Richard Warren, Linen King of Central Arkansas, Conway, Ark.

November 10, 2008

COCOA, Fla. — Guardian Manufacturing Inc. is nearing completion of a 25,000-square-foot addition to its engineering and manufacturing facility here.

Primarily known as a control system integrator, manufacturing and process control consulting provider, Guardian’s new Integrated Services Division works with laundry industry markets to offer rental and sales packages for ozone laundry systems, ozone wastewater systems, ozone chemistry service programs and equipment service solutions.

September 29, 2008

BENICIA, Calif. — The East Bay Business Times has named Pacific Ozone one of the top green and sustainable companies in the Eastern Bay Area Region. Pacific Ozone will be recognized at the Green and Sustainable Business Awards ceremony Oct. 16 at the Claremont Resort in Berkeley, Calif.

August 19, 2008

WASHINGTON — The Energy Information Administration (EIA), the government's energy statistical arm, released its short-term energy outlook Aug. 12, reporting a slight decrease in the price of natural gas as well as gasoline and diesel fuel.

August 11, 2008

CINCINNATI — Cintas Corp., in conjunction with Washing Systems LLC (WSI), has become the first major industrial launderer to make a company-wide transition from a nonylphenol ethoxylate- (NPE) based detergent to a new, more environmentally friendly detergent in its industrial laundry facilities, Cintas says.

With more than 175 facilities in North America, Cintas has begun the transition in several of its locations and plans to be completely NPE-free by the end of 2008.

According to Cintas, benefits of the NPE-free detergent include:

July 31, 2008

“This may seem like a silly question, but what’s the difference between liquid detergents and powdered detergents? How do their cleaning abilities and storage characteristics compare? Is one type more environmentally friendly than the other?”