Front end engineering design and technology trials support for a liquor coproduct contaminant reduction system at an existing 30TPD ag-based pulp mill.
FEL3 front-end engineering design for a proprietary bioprocessing facility to utilize specially engineered microorganisms to synthesize bio-based chemicals and produce sustainable commodity products using renewable raw materials, like sugar.
Front-end engineering and project development support for a 450,000 TPA greenfield wood pellet plant. Roundwood and residuals were used for feedstock. Facility included rotary drying, rail and truck loadout capability.
Isomer provided process engineering design and consulting services in support of an OEM’s proprietary pyrolysis skid designed to convert municipal solid waste (MSW) into an enhanced syngas stream for sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) production.
Front end engineering, detailed design, and Project Management and Construction Oversight services for a $3MM TIC project to expand an existing vacuum system at a 25 TPD ag-based pulp thermoforming facility.
FEL-2 design to support upgrades to an existing linerboard paper machine roll handling line, including conveyors, a lowerator, and shipping floor conveyors for loading finished product rolls into railcars.
The project included front-end engineering and detailed design for a multi-year facility expansion at a honeycomb scrubber plant to facilitate a six-fold increase in production capacity.
Detailed design and structural dynamics engineering evaluation to analyze an existing paper machine dryer section for an unbalance issue at an existing facility.
Pre-FEL study and FEL1 design of a primarily greenfield 150TPD ag-based pulp molded fiber facility, including feedstock handling and separation, material storage, semi-chem pulping, stock preparation, and molding.
This effort included detailed engineering on a four project Anaerobic Digestion to biogas program with site locations in Georgia and California. The facilities were located on existing dairy farms of approximately 12,000 cows each...