DHI’s Engineering & Technology Division is the technical foundation behind our field-deployed process equipment services.

It leads research and development, supports vertically integrated manufacturing, develops proprietary equipment, strengthens procurement standards, supports fluid hydraulic and chemical engineering needs, provides mechanical design support, integrates automation and SCADA, and helps define the operational standards used across the company.

This division allows DHI to move beyond conventional equipment rental and field service execution. It positions DHI as a technically capable process equipment company with the ability to design, build, deploy, control, and continuously improve the systems it operates.

What the Engineering & Technology Division Does

DHI’s engineering function supports the company across multiple technical disciplines, including:

  • Research and development

  • Proprietary equipment design

  • Vertically integrated manufacturing support

  • Process equipment improvement

  • Fluid hydraulics

  • Chemical engineering support

  • Mechanical engineering

  • Process safety and operational standards

  • Engineered procurement specifications

  • SCADA and automation integration

  • Field equipment readiness

  • Technical documentation

  • Continuous improvement from field lessons learned

This structure enables DHI to develop practical, field-ready equipment while maintaining technical control over its design, deployment, operation, and improvement.

Chemical Engineering Support

Chemistry, Treatment Performance, and Process Stability

DHI’s Engineering & Technology Division supports the chemical engineering needs of water treatment, oil separation, produced water handling, and chemical injection projects.

This may include review of:

  • Chemical selection

  • Dosing rates

  • Reaction time

  • Oxidation requirements

  • Coagulation and flocculation

  • pH adjustment

  • Oil and solids separation

  • H2S treatment considerations

  • Scaling potential

  • Chemical compatibility

  • Retention time

  • Mixing requirements

  • Chemical storage and containment

  • Treatment performance data

  • Laboratory and field test results

Chemical treatment systems must be understood as process systems, not just chemical feed systems. The wrong chemical, wrong dose, wrong residence time, or wrong injection point can reduce performance, damage equipment, create downstream problems, or increase safety risk.

Engineering helps connect chemistry, equipment, controls, and field execution into one operating plan.

Mechanical Engineering

Practical Design for Harsh Field Conditions

DHI’s mechanical engineering support focuses on equipment that must work in real field environments.

Mechanical engineering needs may include:

  • Skid design

  • Tank modifications

  • Piping layouts

  • Structural supports

  • Access platforms

  • Maintenance access

  • Equipment mounting

  • Pump and motor alignment

  • Lifting and handling points

  • Trailer or mobile equipment integration

  • Guarding and personnel protection

  • Material selection

  • Corrosion and wear considerations

  • Fabrication drawings

  • Design for serviceability

Field equipment must be rugged, maintainable, transportable, and safe to operate. Mechanical design must account for how equipment is lifted, moved, connected, accessed, serviced, cleaned, and repaired in the field.

DHI’s engineering approach is focused on practical durability, not theoretical design alone.

Vertically Integrated Equipment Development

Design, Build, Improve, and Deploy

DHI’s vertically integrated approach allows the company to design and improve proprietary equipment internally rather than relying entirely on off-the-shelf systems.

This gives DHI greater control over:

  • Equipment layout

  • Material selection

  • Fabrication quality

  • Maintenance access

  • Field durability

  • Operating procedures

  • Instrumentation and control features

  • Safety systems

  • Deployment speed

  • Cost structure

  • Future improvements

By linking engineering, fabrication, operations, procurement, and field feedback, DHI can continuously improve its equipment designs based on real-world performance.

This creates a practical innovation loop:

  • Field need identified

  • Engineering concept developed

  • Equipment designed or modified

  • Fabrication and procurement specified

  • Field deployment reviewed

  • Performance monitored

  • Lessons learned fed back into the next design

That loop is central to DHI’s long-term technology strategy.

Engineered Procurement Standards

Buying Equipment the Right Way

DHI’s engineering team supports procurement by defining the technical specifications required for critical equipment purchases.

This helps ensure that purchased equipment is suitable for the intended field application, rather than being selected only on price or availability.

Engineering-supported procurement may include specifications for:

  • Pumps

  • Motors

  • Variable frequency drives

  • Control panels

  • PLC components

  • Instrumentation

  • Flow meters

  • Pressure sensors

  • Level sensors

  • Valves

  • Chemical injection pumps

  • Piping and hose systems

  • Skid-mounted equipment

  • Tank components

  • Electrical enclosures

  • Structural frames

  • Safety systems

The goal is to make procurement technical, deliberate, and repeatable.

A pump, panel, valve, sensor, or skid is not just a purchased item. It is part of a larger operating system. Engineering ensures that these components are selected with the right pressure rating, material compatibility, control capability, environmental rating, maintenance access, and integration requirements.

Research and Development Leadership

Turning Field Problems Into Practical Technology

DHI’s Engineering & Technology Division leads the company’s research and development efforts. These projects are focused on solving real field problems, improving operating reliability, reducing customer cost, increasing treatment performance, and building proprietary equipment advantages.

R&D efforts may include:

New water treatment equipment
Improved DAF system designs
Oil separation technology
Chemical injection systems
Sludge handling improvements
Mobile process skids
Tank level monitoring systems
Flow control and valve skids
Pump control systems
Remote monitoring and SCADA integration
Automation and shutdown logic
Improved field deployment methods

DHI’s R&D is grounded in field reality. We do not pursue technology for appearance alone. We develop systems that can survive field use, improve performance, reduce risk, and create a measurable operational advantage.

Proprietary Equipment and Product Development

DHI develops and improves proprietary equipment systems to support its field service lines and customer needs.

These systems may include:

  • DAF treatment units

  • Oil separation tanks

  • Reaction tanks

  • Chemical injection systems

  • Pump control packages

  • Inline flow and valve skids

  • Filtration systems

  • Sludge handling packages

  • SCADA-enabled monitoring systems

  • Mobile process equipment packages

  • Custom skids and manifolds

The objective is to create equipment that is not generic, but designed around DHI’s operating experience, service model, customer requirements, and field conditions.

In our opinion, this is one of the most important differentiators for DHI. A company that can design and improve its own equipment is better positioned than a company that can only rent, buy, or imitate standard equipment.

Operational Standards and Technical Governance

Engineering Discipline Applied to Field Execution

The Engineering & Technology Division supports the development and oversight of technical operating standards across DHI’s field equipment projects.

This includes standards for:

  • Equipment setup

  • Hydraulic modeling

  • Pressure control

  • Flow path design

  • Chemical injection configuration

  • Tank sequencing

  • Instrumentation placement

  • Pump operation

  • SCADA and control logic

  • Pre-startup verification

  • Process safety reviews

  • Inspection requirements

  • Maintenance access

  • Field documentation

  • Equipment readiness before mobilization

Engineering helps ensure that field execution is not based on informal judgment alone. It provides the technical backbone for how systems should be designed, reviewed, started up, operated, modified, and improved.

Fluid Hydraulics

Understanding Flow, Pressure, and System Behavior

DHI’s engineering function supports the hydraulic design and review of water transfer, water treatment, pumping, hose, piping, and process equipment systems.

Fluid hydraulics support may include:

  • Flow rate calculations

  • Pressure drop analysis

  • Pump selection

  • Hose and pipe sizing

  • Elevation change review

  • Manifold design

  • Valve placement

  • Backpressure evaluation

  • Deadhead risk review

  • Cavitation risk review

  • Tank level behavior

  • Hydraulic modeling

  • Startup and shutdown behavior

  • Pressure protection requirements

This work is especially important in field-deployed systems where long hose runs, elevation changes, temporary manifolds, customer tie-ins, and changing operating conditions can create unexpected pressure and flow behavior.

Hydraulic understanding is essential to safe, reliable field execution.

Automation, Controls, and SCADA Integration

Modern field process equipment increasingly depends on automation, instrumentation, and remote monitoring.

DHI’s engineering team supports the integration of:

  • PLC control systems

  • SCADA displays

  • Remote monitoring

  • Tank level systems

  • Pressure monitoring

  • Flow meters

  • Alarm logic

  • Shutdown logic

  • Pump control

  • Valve control

  • Chemical injection control

  • Data logging

  • Operator interface screens

  • Customer reporting data

Automation is not simply an add-on. It must be integrated into the process design, operating philosophy, and safety review.

The engineering team helps ensure that field controls are understandable, testable, maintainable, and aligned with the way the system actually operates.

Supporting Process Safety

The Engineering & Technology Division supports DHI’s process safety practices, including:

  • Process Hazard Analysis, PHA

  • Pre-Startup Safety Review, PSSR

  • Management of Change, MOC

  • Equipment readiness reviews

  • Operating envelope definition

  • Safeguard identification

  • Control logic verification

  • Technical action item resolution

  • Post-job lessons learned

Engineering plays a critical role in making sure technical risks are identified before startup and that changes are reviewed before implementation.

This is especially important for temporary and mobile process systems where equipment is often assembled, modified, and operated under changing field conditions.