Case studies and testimonials
City of Bentonville Wastewater Treatment Utility increases plant efficiency with  VOLUTE™ Dewatering Press
Sludge treatment equipment/water treatment chemicals

City of Bentonville Wastewater Treatment Utility increases plant efficiency with  VOLUTE™ Dewatering Press

The Bentonville Wastewater Treatment Utility in USA

  • Sludge dewatering press
  • Sewage treatment
  • Industrial waste disposal cost reduction
  • Initial cost/outlays for construction reduction
  • Operation management man-hour reduction
  • Maintenance man-hours reduction
  • Pilot test/rental
  • Replacement of dewatering machine
The Bentonville Wastewater Treatment Utility in USA

Long before the Clean Water Act required communities to treat wastewater, the city of Bentonville, Arkansas, recognized wastewater treatment as a viable option for replenishing fresh water supplies and protecting waterways from harmful pollutants.

The Bentonville Wastewater Treatment Utility has successfully treated wastewater in a single location since the 1940s. The latest renovation to the location, in 1985, created an Activated Sludge-Extended Aeration plant still in use today. The current wastewater treatment plant employs over 20 professionals, including operators for 24-hour coverage, 365 days a year.

The belt that ran its course

When Bentonville built its most recent plant in 1985, the city purchased a traditional belt filter press to dewater waste bio-solids sludge. The belt press served its function well for many years, however recently, the press required increasingly frequent repairs, even with proper preventative maintenance, and the plant had few options for parts.

Chris Earl, the manager of the Bentonville Wastewater Treatment Utility, explains the challenges of the aging technology: “The belt press was about 35 years-old, the last of a discontinued model. It was starting to show its age and become a maintenance nightmare. So we decided to start looking at some different technologies.”

Screw presses meeting modern demands

Bentonville hired the engineering and environmental services firm Garver Engineering to research practical alternatives for bio-solids dewatering systems.

Options included modern belt filter presses, screw presses, and centrifuges, yet the most appropriate option is not simply a matter of preference. The best choice is often based on the specifications of a plant, including the main plant processes, hydraulics and loading rates, and even the unique nature of the local sludge.

When evaluating dewatering technologies, Bentonville was attracted to the screw press. Like a traditional belt press, a screw press uses a polymer to flocculate the solids and then squeeze them to create a semi-dry cake. Whereas the belt press sends the solids through multiple rollers fitted with filter belts, the screw press sends the solids through a porous casing using an auger.

After examining Bentonville’s needs, Garver suggested two screw press systems for a pilot test, including a traditional design screw press and VOLUTE™ Dewatering Press – an evolution of the typical screw press design. 

In Bentonville’s pilot tests, both screw presses performed exceptionally well. However, the competitor’s required a significant investment in infrastructure and installation ($9.1 million) compared to the VOLUTE™ Dewatering Press, which fit the belt filter press’s existing footprint and required minimal construction and installation costs ($1.1 million). The city of Bentonville installed the VOLUTE™ Dewatering Press in two short months with little to no construction and installation challenges. The city completed the system and started service in January 2019.

The results: a piece of cake

As a pioneering city in wastewater treatment, Bentonville was attracted to the innovative design of the VOLUTE™ Dewatering Press, which uses a unique dewatering drum invented by us in Japan in the early 1990s: VOLUTE™ technology.

The key feature of the invention is a unique drum design, which thickens and presses sludge in one compact operation. The design is a highly efficient means of dewatering, transforming feed sludge as low as 0.1 percent into cake, often over 20 percent solids.

The efficiency has already created significant savings for Bentonville. The new screw press only requires nine days of usage per month (12 hours per day) compared to the old belt press, which required 22 days per month.

Additionally, to evaluate the effectiveness of the VOLUTE™ Dewatering Press, Earl compared the average solids produced between the final year of the belt press and the first year of the VOLUTE™ Dewatering Press. In its final year, the belt press produced an average of 13.25 percent daily solids. In its first year, the VOLUTE™ Dewatering Press produced an average of 18.66 percent daily solids for a 28.5 percent increase in solids.

The new, cutting-edge screw press translates to a dryer cake, which offers a significant benefit for disposal. The dryer cake means Bentonville is paying less to haul a greater percentage of solids. Earl also notes that currently, after fine-tuning the new machine, the city now produces 22 percent solids. Also, in its first several years of usage, the VOLUTE™ Dewatering Press has required only minimal preventative maintenance.

“We’ve only needed to change the oil in the gear boxes and grease the things that need to be greased.”

For the city, the benefits translate to more clean water in the environment and significant cost savings.

Finally, since installing the VOLUTE™ Dewatering Press, Chris Earl has enjoyed the pristine nature of the fully enclosed stainless steel unit:

“Anybody who has ever dealt with a belt press knows there’s always a mist in the air, a water in the air. With this new machine, none of that this happening. It’s so clean out there you can almost eat off the floor.”

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