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What the Remediator® Grease Treatment System does to FOG
Fats are widely distributed in nature and are
used for fuel, lubricants, and as the starting
products for other compounds. The chemical
structures of fats are quite complex due to the
many combinations possible as fatty acid
groups attached to glycerol “backbones.” Plant
seed fats present up to 1,000 different fatty
acid-glycerol combinations while animal fats
may produce over 60,000. This helps explain
why animal fats often are more difficult to
degrade than vegetable fats.
Fats and oils assimilated within the biofilm are
hydrolyzed by enzymes (biological catalysts)
called lipases. Certain bacteria are capable of
producing various lipases and are key to the
bio-degradation processes. Once the fatty acids
and glycerols have been separated, a host of
other bacteria are ready to continue the
catabolic process which leads to the oxidation
of lipids into carbon dioxide and water. |
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The Remediator® Culture
The bacteria used in the Remediator®, we call
Remediator® Culture, are naturally occurring
bacteria species. The bacteria adhere to the
large surface area of the media both above and
below the static water level of the Remediator®
Grease Treatment System. These micro-organisms
form a controllable biological ecosystem
called a biofilm. As the effluent surges into the
Remediator®, the fat, oil, and grease and other
nutrients are brought into contact with the
biofilm where the bacteria digests the waste,
releasing carbon dioxide and water.
The Remediator® Culture is totally nonpathogenic
(does not cause infections) and is
safe to humans. The bacteria that comprise
Remediator® Culture can be found in our
digestive tracts, some are present in any
tap-water source, one is present in the gut of
a termite and some are found in soil.
The Remediator® Culture multiply by cell
division. Each ounce of Remediator® Culture
contains approximately 5.5 billion colony-forming
units that develop and maintain a healthy biofilm
in the media chamber. The bacteria multiply
approximately 50,000 times in 24 hours,
enabling rapid elimination of fat, oil, grease, sugar
and starch. Individual cell life is approximately 20
minutes in free or planktonic state. However, cell
life is extended somewhat in the protection of a
biofilm, or in conditions of lower temperature or
reduced food availability.
Remediator® Culture is essential to maintaining
population stability and diversity in the biofilm. |
The benefits of bacteria and its use with
the Remediator® Beneficial use of microorganisms such as yeast
and bacteria touches virtually every aspect of our
day to day lives. Perhaps the most common
uses of bacteria are in the production of antibiotics,
amino acids, citric acid and vitamins.
These items are used by nearly everyone daily in
one form or another as medicines, dietary supplements,
flavorings and preservatives. These products
and the products they enhance would not be
possible without the use of beneficial organisms.
Active use of micro-organisms is essential to
brewing, dairy, baking, fruit and vegetable
processing, sugar and starch production as well.
The most fundamental and most critical function
of bacteria in our lives is at the very basis of
life on the planet earth. The availability of the
building blocks of life: carbon, nitrogen and
oxygen is the direct result of bacterial action.
Free atmospheric oxygen is the by-product of
mineral eating stramatolytes; the nitrogen cycle
which provides the majority of our atmosphere
requires the activity of nitrifying and nitrogen
releasing bacteria; carbon, the substance of all
life on earth is recycled only by bacteria or fire.
People rarely know or appreciate the dependence
of their very existence on the lowly bacteria.

The photo shows a portion of the 2,128 cells in the media
(patent pending) on which the Remediator® Culture bacteria
affix themselves to form the biofilm. The configuration of cells is
designed to create small vortices in the wastewater flow, causing
the grease to rise to the surface. All separated and retained grease
is digested from the waste stream. |