Sewage Defoamer – High-Performance Foam Control Solution for Sewage Treatment Plants
Foam formation is a common challenge in sewage treatment plants (STPs), wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs), industrial effluent treatment plants (ETPs), and marine sewage systems. Excessive foam can reduce treatment efficiency, interfere with aeration, cause overflow, and increase maintenance costs. Sewage Defoamer is a specially formulated antifoaming agent designed to provide rapid and long-lasting foam control in sewage and wastewater treatment applications.
What is Sewage Defoamer?
Sewage Defoamer is a high-performance liquid antifoam formulated to eliminate and prevent foam formation in biological and industrial wastewater treatment systems. It quickly penetrates foam bubbles, causing them to collapse while preventing new foam from forming.
Suitable for both continuous dosing and shock treatment, it ensures smooth plant operation without affecting the biological treatment process when used as recommended.
Key Features
-
Rapid foam knockdown action
-
Long-lasting foam suppression
-
Effective in biological and industrial wastewater
-
Suitable for aerobic and anaerobic treatment systems
-
Easy to dose and disperse
-
Compatible with automatic dosing systems
-
Helps improve operational efficiency
-
Reduces maintenance and cleaning requirements
Applications
-
Sewage Treatment Plants (STPs)
-
Wastewater Treatment Plants (WWTPs)
-
Effluent Treatment Plants (ETPs)
-
Marine sewage treatment systems
-
Industrial wastewater treatment
-
Equalization tanks
-
Aeration tanks
-
Clarifiers
-
Sludge processing units
-
Biogas and anaerobic digesters
Benefits
Fast Foam Elimination
Instantly breaks down excessive foam and prevents overflow.
Improves Treatment Efficiency
Maintains proper aeration and enhances biological treatment performance.
Reduces Maintenance
Prevents foam-related operational problems and minimizes downtime.
Cost-Effective
Low dosage requirements provide economical and reliable foam control.
Easy to Use
Can be added manually or through automated dosing systems.
Typical Dosage
The recommended dosage depends on foam intensity and wastewater characteristics:
For optimum performance, conduct a small-scale trial before full-scale application.
Typical Properties
|
Property |
Typical Value |
|
Appearance |
White to off-white liquid |
|
Type |
Silicone-based or Non-silicone (available as required) |
|
Solubility |
Easily dispersible in water |
|
pH |
Neutral |
|
Application |
Foam control in wastewater treatment |
Industries Served
-
Municipal sewage treatment plants
-
Marine and shipping
-
Food processing industries
-
Chemical manufacturing
-
Textile processing
-
Paper and pulp mills
-
Pharmaceutical plants
-
Petrochemical industries
-
Dairy and beverage processing
Why Choose Our Sewage Defoamer?
Our Sewage Defoamer is engineered to deliver fast, efficient, and long-lasting foam control in demanding wastewater treatment environments. It helps maintain stable plant operation, improves treatment efficiency, and reduces operating costs, making it the ideal solution for municipal, marine, and industrial wastewater systems.
Sewage Defoamer, Wastewater Defoamer, STP Defoamer, ETP Antifoam, Wastewater Antifoam Chemical, Sewage Treatment Foam Control, Silicone Defoamer for Sewage, Marine Sewage Defoamer, Foam Control Chemical, Industrial Wastewater Defoamer, Biological Treatment Defoamer, Wastewater Treatment Chemicals.
38249090
CHEMICAL VALUABLE WORD :
ACGIH is the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists. It recommends upper limits (called TLVs) for exposure to workplace chemicals.
A carcinogen is a substance that causes cancer.
The CAS number is assigned by the Chemical Abstracts Service to identify a specific chemical.
A combustible substance is a solid, liquid or gas that will burn.
A corrosive substance is a gas, liquid or solid that causes irreversible damage to human tissue or containers.
DEP is the Department of Environmental Protection.
DOT is the Department of Transportation, the federal agency that regulates the transportation of chemicals.
EPA is the Environmental Protection Agency, the federal agency responsible for regulating environmental hazards.
A fetus is an unborn human or animal.
A flammable substance is a solid, liquid, vapor or gas that will ignite easily and burn rapidly.
The flash point is the temperature at which a liquid or solid gives off vapor that can form a flammable mixture with air.
HHAG is the Human Health Assessment Group of the federal EPA.
IARC is the International Agency for Research on Cancer, a scientific group that classifies chemicals according to their cancer-causing potential.
A miscible substance is a liquid or gas that will evenly dissolve in another.
mg/m3 means milligrams of a chemical in a cubic meter of air. It is a measure of concentration (weight/volume).
A mutagen is a substance that causes mutations. A mutation is a change in the genetic material in a body cell. Mutations can lead to birth defects, miscarriages, or cancer.
NAERG is the North American Emergency Response Guidebook. It was jointly developed by Transport Canada, the United States Department of Transportation and the Secretariat of Communications and Transportation of Mexico. It is a guide for first responders to quickly identify the specific or generic hazards of material involved in a transportation incident, and to protect themselves and the general public during the initial response phase of the incident.
NCI is the National Cancer Institute, a federal agency that determines the cancer-causing potential of chemicals.
NFPA is the National Fire Protection Association. It classifies substances according to their fire and explosion hazard.
NIOSH is the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. It tests equipment, evaluates and approves respirators, conducts studies of workplace hazards, and proposes standards to OSHA.
NTP is the National Toxicology Program which tests chemicals and reviews evidence for cancer.
OSHA is the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, which adopts and enforces health and safety standards.
PEL is the Permissible Exposure Limit which is enforceable by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
PIH is a DOT designation for chemicals which are Poison Inhalation Hazards.
ppm means parts of a substance per million parts of air. It is a measure of concentration by volume in air.
A reactive substance is a solid, liquid or gas that releases energy under certain conditions.
A teratogen is a substance that causes birth defects by damaging the fetus.
TLV is the Threshold Limit Value, the workplace exposure limit recommended by ACGIH.
The vapor pressure is a measure of how readily a liquid or a solid mixes with air at its surface. A higher vapor pressure indicates a higher concentration of the substance in air and therefore increases the likelihood of breathing it in.