The University of Washington geotechnical labs have been employing a "cyclical" deairing system for more than a decade now. The units were constructed in-house, designed primarily by graduate students, and basically consist of 2 deairing tanks that work cyclically--while one unit is being drained, the other is filling/deairing. The units were built primarily to run very long-term permeability and/or geotextile filter compatibility tests. Using a series of solenoids and float valves allows the control of water inflow and outflow, as well as the application of vacuum. The tanks themselves, as Focht3 suggested above, are made of Schedule 40 PVC and are each ~36 inches tall--no durability issues in 10+ yrs. Small clear acrylic standpipes were mounted on the side of each tank to check levels. Water is sprayed in (after being filtered) under vacuum to achieve efficient deairing. Never had any problems (in 10+ yrs) with biological or algae buildup. The system performed so well that other research groups became interested, and a second-generation system was built in 2000 that incorporates most of the same features of the first, but includes an outflow pump and some minor design upgrades (there were some nice "lessons learned" from the first tanks). I don't believe the system was ever specifically detailed in any technical articles or papers--maybe it should be. The only reference that contains significant information I know of is Greg Fischer's (one of the original designers) PhD Dissertation "THe Influence of Fabric Pore Structure on the Behavior of Geotextile Filters," University of Washington, 1994, 498pp. Available on-loan from your local academic institution or by UMI. If you're using *a lot* of deaired water, this is a nice option--basically an "unlimited supply." The tanks do take about 35 minutes to fill under vacuum, so draining one faster than that causes problems by throwing the solenoid sequencing off, etc etc (but rarely have we ever drained so much deaired water so fast under test conditions). I'd be pleased to provide some additional information on the system at request.