APPLICATIONS & SOLUTIONS

Catalyst Function

A catalyst is a substance that affects, promotes or accelerates reaction of two or more substances to generate a different end product. Catalysts are often used in industrial processes, including food manufacture, to optimise manufacturing rates and volumes. Catalysis (the action of a catalyst) may also be used to change compounds to minimise their effect on processes, the environment and human wellbeing. Two key types of catalyst are in general use by industry today: catalyst support and true catalysts.

Catalysts themselves may be:

Homogenous – used in the solvent and intimately mixed with the reagents Heterogenous – used in solid form as a contact ‘surface’ for the reagents

Applications

Portable water

  • Municipal Drinking Water

  • Food & Beverage Water

Impurities

  • Disinfection by-products (DBP), e.g. trihalomethanes (THM), bromate

  • Natural organic matter (NOM) that causes taste and odor, e.g. geosmin, 2-MIB

  • Algae toxins (cyanotoxins), such as microcystins

  • Persistent organic pollutants (POP), e.g. PCBs, dioxins, pesticides

  • Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), e.g. PFOA, PFOS

  • Volatile organic compounds (VOCs)

  • Organic matter

  • Micropollutants, e.g. endocrine-disrupting compounds

Solutions