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Why MACROBurn? - The finest incinerators in the world

Dowload the following information sheet to read about how MACROBurn incinerators are built and why MACROtech products are the best equipment to use to manage your waste and deal with harmful emissions.

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 Basci Incineration ProcessBasci Incineration Process  MACROBurn Incinerator - Saubatech

 
Incineration and modern medical waste management
Modern medical waste is highly volatile. A single load of waste can burn fast enough to exceed the design capacity of the incinerator. The rate at which materials is fed into the system must be varied as the flammability of the materials increases or decreases to control the rate of combustion. Limiting the primary air and the amount of heat on the waste during the initial stages of volatilisation also helps to control the rate of combustion.

The MacroBurn medical waste incinerator can control the rate of combustion of medical waste to match the combustibility of the waste materials. Whether the waste has a low combustibility or a high combustibility, the system will regulate the rate of incineration to create a constant throughput of incinerated waste, says incineration specialist company Saubatech director Andreas Thieme.

The system automatically regulates and deflects the heat and air supplies to control the combustion rate of the materials inside the incinerator.
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Explaining The Process Of Incineration

Some of the most difficult products that need disposing are often put through a much harsher process known as incineration. The incinerators are normally found in large factories that deal with waste products or disposal of waste products. They are mostly used to dispose of bovine carcasses, poultry, chemical products or anything else where burial is not enough. How does this process work and what exactly is incineration?

In simple terms incineration is the process of that treats waste though combustion of organic materials. This is an extremely high temperature treatment and is quite often referred to as the thermal treatment. The waste products are turned into ash, particulates, flue gases and heat that can also be used to generate electric power. Any harmful pollutants left behind from the flue gases are dispersed into the atmosphere.

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Explaining The Process of Cremation

Losing someone dear is definitely the most unfortunate thing that could happen to someone, however we all have to go through this some time or another. One alternative to a traditional burial is through cremation. This article will give you the nuts and bolts of the cremation process.

By the process of cremation, dead human bodies are reduced to basic chemical compounds in the form of bone fragments and ashes. The cremated remains that you get are actually pulverized dried bone fragments and it gets pulverized in a device known as an electric cremated remains processor. The bone gets converted into very fine sand like texture which can be easily scattered.


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What Happens to the Body during Cremation?

"Earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust…"

Many, many years ago, cremation had been thought to be so unnatural and extreme that cremation societies and other advocacy groups were formed to "lobby" for its greater practice. Health benefits were cited as reasons to cremate as well as ecological ones. What about the thought of leaving more land for the living and taking less for the dead? Even 100 years ago, only 1% of deaths in the United States involved cremation.

Today the cremation is preferred by almost 50% of living Americans. There are at least 2,000 crematories within the United States and Canada and they will approach a number of 1 million cremations. The subject of "what happens to the human body is one that many people don't want to talk about and yet there are many who wonder…

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Macroburn Incinerator

Find out how the Macroburn incinerator works by clicking on the diagram below:

Macroburn Incinerator - Saubatech

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