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Technical and Investment Guide to ZLD and Water Recycling: Stone Processing Wastewater

2026-05-18

Introduction

Stone processing—including cutting, polishing, and gravel production—generates significant volumes of wastewater containing high suspended solids. Traditional settlement ponds are land-intensive, inefficient, and often fail to meet environmental Discharge Standards. This article presents a proven Zero Liquid Discharge (ZLD) solution that enables stone processors to reuse treated water directly in production while minimizing waste disposal costs.

Process Overview

1. Solids Separation in a Lamella Clarifier

Wastewater is pumped from an equalization tank into a Lamella clarifier. Inside the clarifier, specially coated honeycomb tubes accelerate solids settling. Clear water overflows to a reuse tank and is pumped back to production lines. Concentrated sludge accumulates at the bottom of the clarifier.

2. Sludge Dewatering with a Filter Press

The thickened sludge is fed by a pneumatic diaphragm pump into a filter press. The hydraulic system provides a closing pressure of up to 250 bar. Special filter plates and high-performance filter cloths ensure a tight seal during the pressing cycle. Press filtrate is returned to the wastewater tank. A flow sensor monitors the dryness of the filter cake, and the press opens automatically when the preset dryness is reached. An air-assisted vibratory system helps discharge the dry sludge cake.

  1. Fully Automated PLC Control

The entire process is managed by a PLC controller. The system can run 24 hours a day unattended, and all operating parameters can be adjusted as needed.

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Key Technical Features

Feature

Performance

Treatment capacity

15–75 m³/h (standard models), custom sizes available

Filtration cycle time

As low as 15 minutes per cycle

Chemical addition

None required (purely physical process)

Treated water quality

Solids < 100 mg/L – suitable for direct reuse

Footprint

No large multi-stage sedimentation ponds needed

Filter cloth life

>3,000 hours even with abrasive particles

Final sludge moisture content

Approx. 40%

Equipment Configurations & Investment Reference

Three typical installations demonstrate the scalability of the solution.

Configuration A - 50 m³/h, solids < 0.2%

Equipment: Lamella clarifier + filter press + PLC touch control

Total power: 4.4 kW

Dimensions (clarifier + press): 4,630×2,510×2,910 mm / 2,260×1,000×4,120 mm

Investment: < €55,000

Configuration B - 5 m³/h (stone cutting wastewater)

Equipment: Compact filter unit + bag filtration system

Dimensions: 1,600×820×2,010 mm

Investment: ~ €6,500

Configuration C - 200 m³/h, solids < 0.1%

Equipment: Two parallel clarifiers + filter press + PLC control

Total power: 6.6 kW

Dimensions (clarifiers): 2×6,520×2,550×4,120 mm

Investment: ~ €100,000

Maintenance Costs (Typical Consumables)

Component

Service life

Cost range (per unit)

Filter cloths

3,000–4,000 hours

€15–45 (imported quality, size-dependent)

Diaphragm pump membranes

As needed

€15–40

Diaphragm pump balls

As needed

€5–25

Ball seats (304 stainless)

As needed

€9–32

O-rings (PTFE)

As needed

€2–4

Case Studies

Case 1 - Gravel Processing

Location: Belgium

Industry: Gravel production

System: 2 x clarifier VMS500

In operation since: 2009

Long-term reliability demonstrated in abrasive gravel wastewater.

Case 2 - Granite Processing

Location: Germany

Industry: Granite industry

Systems: clarifier VMS200 + filter press KEP630/15 (2013) and clarifier VMS150 + filter press KRP630/12 (2017)

Multiple installations showing consistent performance over years.

Case 3 - Natural Stone & Composites

Location: Germany

Industry: Natural stone and composite materials

System: clarifier VMS250 + filter press KRP630/8

In operation since: 2015

Efficient solids removal without chemical addition.

Conclusion

Zero Liquid Discharge for stone processing wastewater is technically and economically feasible. The described system eliminates the need for large settlement ponds, reduces fresh water consumption, cuts sludge disposal costs, and meets strict environmental requirements—all with fully automated, unattended operation.