What chemicals can be used for the storage of PE tanks

Mondo Health Updated on 2024-03-05

PE water tanks, i.e. polyethylene water tanks, can store a wide range of chemicals. Here are some common categories of chemicals that can be stored in a PE tank:

Inorganic acids: such as sulfuric acid, nitric acid, hydrochloric acid, phosphoric acid, hydrofluoric acid, hydrobromic acid, hypochlorous acid, silicic acid, nitrous acid, sulfurous acid, carbonic acid, etc.

Organic acids: such as acetic acid, formic acid, amino acids, malic acid, citric acid, etc.

Alkali and hydroxide: such as ammonia, sodium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, etc.

Industrial and building materials compounds: such as hydrogen peroxide, flocculants, polycarboxylic acids, etc.

Elements, gases and other inorganic compounds: such as methanol, ethanol, formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, sulfur, sulfur colloids, phosphorus, mercury, hydrogen peroxide, ammonia, coal, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen bromide, hydrogen sulfide, phosphine, etc.

Contains halogenated organic compounds, amines, phenols and other organic compounds.

Waste liquid: It can store all kinds of waste liquid, such as medical waste liquid, waste emulsion, waste nitric acid, waste hydronic acid, oily waste liquid, inorganic waste liquid, etc.

In addition, PE water tanks are also widely used in the water treatment industry as an ideal storage container for media such as sodium hypochlorite. In the construction industry, PE water tanks are also used to store water, and can be used as admixture superplasticizer storage tanks, compound tanks.

It should be noted that although PE water tanks can be used to store the above chemicals, in practical applications, specific chemical properties, temperature requirements, concentrations and other factors need to be considered. At the same time, when changing the liquid, it should be understood whether the PE water tank is allowed to contain the liquid, so as to avoid economic losses or safety hazards.

The above information is for reference only, and should be used in combination with the actual situation and in accordance with relevant safety standards and recommendations.

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