Mon 20 Mar 2017 12:34

PureSOx scrubber development continues


Alfa Laval pursuing improvements and options to make scrubber more flexible and optimized.



Alfa Laval says it is continuing to work on making improvements to its PureSOx sulphur oxide (SOx) scrubber platform.

Launched in 2012, the product is designed to enable vessels meet SOx regulation limits while continuing to use cheaper heavy fuel oil (HFO).

Today, PureSOx development continues through both ongoing optimization and the introduction of new options. At the Alfa Laval Test & Training Centre, in particular, the platform is being adapted for the widest range of customer needs.

"Compliance is always in focus, but customers have a broad spectrum of other requirements," says Erik Haveman, Sales Director, Exhaust Gas Cleaning. "Those can go well beyond open-loop, closed-loop and hybrid arrangements, or the choice between U- and I-designs. Today we can match a vessel's sailing profile by optimizing PureSOx for different compliance needs, and we offer many options to suit a vessel's individual circumstances."

Developing for and with customers

Alfa Laval core technologies are found not only in the scrubber itself, but also in the patented separator technology of its water cleaning unit and in the heat exchangers used for cooling the circulation water. Additionally, PureSOx has played a central role in much of the work at the Alfa Laval Test & Training Centre in Aalborg, Denmark.

The scrubber at the centre has been used in developing the PureSOx platform, but also for solving individual customer challenges in exhaust gas cleaning. Designed for 1.5 megawatts (MW), it can be pushed to its physical limits by the centre's 2-MW engine, which would be unsafe and impractical on board.

"In the controlled environment of the Alfa Laval Test & Training Centre, we can really work with extremes," Haveman explains. "This lets us innovate and meet design targets more quickly, but it also allows us to explore customer-specific challenges and inquiries. For example, we can look for the best way to cool a hot scrubber for start-up, or find ways to adapt the system for a particular engine type."

Improvements and options for greater optimization

Work at the Alfa Laval Test & Training Centre and elsewhere has meant continuous improvement of the PureSOx platform, especially with regard to size and resource use. A significant size reduction for the U-design scrubber was announced only last year, and tests have been performed with many different filling elements and sprayer arrangements to find the lower possible water consumption. Minimizing pressure drop across the system, which reduces fuel consumption by the engine, is a further area of focus.

Likewise, new options are being introduced at a steady pace. "Recently we introduced an option for open-loop scrubbing that complies with the strict pH requirements of the US Vessel General Permit," says Haveman. "For cruise ships and other high-profile vessels, we have also released an Exhaust Gas Reheater option, which warms the exhaust gas plume to reduce the chance of it being visible."

Combined with multiple operating arrangements, a choice of scrubber designs and the new Global, ECA and Flex compliance profiles, options like these are designed to allow the platform to address the specific needs of most vessels on the market.

"As the 2020 global cap approaches, more ship owners and operators will be looking at scrubber solutions than ever before," says Haveman. "Whatever their sailing profile or vessel constraints, the PureSOx platform will give them the flexibility and peace of mind they seek."

Image: Erik Haveman, Sales Director, Exhaust Gas Cleaning at Alfa Laval.


Philippe Berterottière and Matthieu de Tugny. GTT unveils cubic LNG fuel tank design for boxships with BV approval  

New GTT CUBIQ design claims to reduce construction time and boost cargo capacity.

Wilhelmshaven Express, Hapag-Lloyd. Hapag-Lloyd secures multi-year liquefied biomethane supply deal with Shell  

Agreement supports container line's decarbonisation strategy and net-zero fleet operations target by 2045.

Dual-fuel ship. Dual-fuel vessels will dominate next decade, says Columbia Group  

Ship manager predicts LNG-powered vessels will bridge gap until zero-carbon alternatives emerge.

Stril Poseidon vessel. VPS campaign claims 12,000 tonnes of CO2 savings across 300 vessels  

Three-month efficiency drive involved 12 shipping companies testing operational strategies through software platform.

Birdseye view of a ship. Gard warns of widespread cat fines surge in marine fuel  

Insurer reports elevated contamination levels, echoing VPS circular in early September.

Christoffer Ahlqvist, ScanOcean. ScanOcean opens London office to expand global bunker trading operations  

New office will be led by Christoffer Ahlqvist, Head of Trading.

Aurora Expeditions' Sylvia Earle. Aurora Expeditions claims 90% GHG reduction in landmark HVO trials  

Sylvia Earle said to be the first Infinity-class ship to trial HVO biofuel.

Molslinjen ferry illustration. Wärtsilä wins contract for electric propulsion systems on two Danish ferries  

Technology group to supply integrated electric systems for Molslinjen's battery-electric catamarans.

Manja Ostertag, Bunker Holding. Bunker Holding executive to address biofuels at Berlin event  

Manja Ostertag will discuss production scaling and supply chain integration at September forum.

Svitzer Ingrid tugboat naming ceremony. Denmark's first electric tug named as Svitzer advances decarbonisation goals  

Svitzer Ingrid said to reduce annual CO₂ emissions by 600-900 tonnes using battery power.