Friday 10 January 2014

Plastic Channel, The Modern Water Treatment Medium



 

Image Courtsey:  Tankonyvtar  hu sites

 Many people who are not related to the heavy industries sector may be thinking about the increasing popularity of Polyvinyl Chloride material in the designing of tubes meant to be used for liquid or gas transfer in industrial establishment nowadays.

 The reasons are numerous and this has made the usage of these tubes prevalent in other sectors like Real Estate and so on also. This Plastic Tube work set up is used for the easy conveyance of liquids like chemicals, heating fluid and water. So the water treatment industry can’t remain away from utilizing this modern tube work set up.

In the past few years we have seen that plants treating waste water are using pipes made of PVC so that processing can become more efficient. A few years back, tubes made of traditional metals like Copper or Iron were used in such establishments. These tubes had brought their own set of problems. 

 

  Image Courtsey: Chemtronics  Technology
                                   
 Iron tubes were easily prone to rust, thus contaminating the water which would pass through them. Copper Tubes were financially unvisitable as Copper is a very expensive metal to purchase at all times. You’ll be amazed to know that even wood was used in the designing of such tubes but it is not a tough material to make tubes handle all types of passing liquids with varying chemical compositions.

After observing such setbacks in the past several years, industry experts thought of using this tubework made out of Polyvinyl Chloride material. It overcomes the negative points of those conventional metal tubes. Such tubes also have advantages of their own, thus making water treatment machinery more efficient to operate. 

These tubes can be made flexible according to the requirements by adding plasticizers to them. They can be carved into any shape or form before installing them into an operational framework. They’ll just get more popular within the years to come.

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