Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) and 
Mitsubishi Kakoki Kaisha (MKK) have jointly developed a hybrid SOx 
scrubber system that efficiently removes sulfur oxides (SOx) from 
exhaust gas emitted by marine diesel engines. The hybrid SOx scrubber 
system is the first in Japan to comply with the more stringent SOx 
emission regulations that will take effect in designated emission 
control areas (ECAs) in 2015. The system is capable of scrubbing exhaust
 gas from the combustion of fuels emitted from bunker heavy fuel oil to 
the level combusting more costly low-sulfur fuel oil. By adopting a 
modular design, the system also facilitates retrofit installations on 
ships already in service.
The Hybrid SOx Scrubber System has two 
scrubbing system: one that uses circulating with freshwater and the 
other uses one-pass flow with seawater. The freshwater system is capable
 of scrubbing exhaust gas from combustions of heavy fuel oil with 3.5 
per cent sulfur content to that of low-sulfur fuel oil with 0.1 percent 
sulfur content, achieving compliance with SOx emission regulations of 
IMO scheduled to go into effect in ECAs in 2015. The seawater system is 
capable of scrubbing exhaust to a level of 0.5 per cent sulfur content 
fuel oil to comply with regulations that are expected to be applied in 
global marine areas in the future. Washing seawater is discharged 
outside after treatment, complying with requirements for discharged wash
 water.
The system includes a SOx scrubber, a 
container unit housing a wash water processing system and other 
components, and ISO standard tank containers to store sludge and a 
caustic soda solution (NaOH) to neutralize circulating fresh water. 
Modular construction enables flexible arrangement of components, 
reducing installation time and cost requirements, and making it easier 
to retrofit the system to ships already in service.
MKK has been providing flue gas scrubbing 
systems for desulfurization and denitration to the chemical industry in 
Japan since the mid-1950s. In addition, it has also developed products 
such as centrifugal separators for bunker fuel oil and lubrication oil 
for diesel engines, and pressurized fine filtration system for the 
chemical industry. Going forward, MHI and MKK will draw on their 
extensive shipbuilding and engineering expertise to aggressively promote
 the new high-performance SOx scrubber system for use on both newly 
commissioned ships and ships already in service, including ships built 
by other shipyards.
MHI and MKK also plan to install one of the
 new high-performance systems on a ship in a joint study with ClassNK, 
K-Line and Japan Marine United Corporation as part of ClassNK's "Joint 
R&D for Industry" program.
Post to be found at:
http://www.maritime-executive.com/article/Japans-first-Compliant-SOx-Scrubber-Developed-2014-02-12/
 
 
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