Lystek

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Founded2000 (2000) in Ontario, Canada
FoundersOwen Ward
Ajay Singh
Lystek International, Inc.
Company typePrivately held company
IndustryThermal hydrolysis
Waste management
Founded2000 (2000) in Ontario, Canada
FoundersOwen Ward
Ajay Singh
Headquarters
Ontario
,
Canada
Area served
North America
Key people
Ajay Singh (Technical Director)
Michael Beswick (Executive Vice President)
ProductsLysteGro
LysteMize
LysteCarb
ParentR. W. Tomlinson Ltd.
Websitelystek.com

Lystek International is a Canadian waste treatment technology company founded in 2000 at the University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada to commercialize treatment technologies for biosolids and other non-hazardous, organic waste materials. Lystek is headquartered in Cambridge, Ontario, Canada and is owned by its management and R.W. Tomlinson Ltd.[1]

Lystek's technology uses thermal hydrolysis involving high speed shearing, alkali addition and low temperature steam to produce biofertilizer.[2][3] The product can be sold as a commercial biofertilizer called LysteGro or recycled to anaerobic digesters and biological nutrient removal (BNR) systems for optimization of the wastewater treatment plant operation.[4] The Lystek process condition disintegrates microbial cell wall/membranes and hydrolyzes complex macromolecules into simpler compounds.[5] Recycling up to 25% of the product to the digester increases biogas yields by greater than 30 % and enhances biodegradation, reducing output of biosolids by at least 20%.[6]

Applications

The Lystek system can be installed as a back end, post Anaerobic digestion, post dewatering solution at the wastewater treatment plant. It can also take raw sludge directly without an anaerobic digester process.[7] Alternatively, the system can be used in a regional processing hub to service multiple organic waste generators. The Lystek solution is modular and has a small footprint, making it flexible to deploy and easy to retrofit into existing facilities.[8]

Commercial plants and projects

As of 2015, there are five installations[9] of the Lystek technology in Ontario, and a sixth facility in North Battleford, Saskatchewan.[10] A seventh installation, (first in the U.S.) was planned to be commissioned and fully operational in Fairfield, California by the end of the first calendar quarter of 2016.[11]

References

Further reading

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