Dragon Polymers Inc. has identified a 20 acre site in South Carolina as a potential landfill site containing Nylon 66. The new site is located with 10 miles of current landfill site in Greenwood, South Carolina. The company will begin testing on the site in the first quarter of 2013, with the help of the Ecole Polytechnic de Montreal's Geophysics department using Electrical Resistivity Tomography technology to determine how much Nylon 66 exists at the site.

The new landfill potential is still unknown but will add to the companies estimated reserves of over 35,000,000 lbs. of Nylon 66. In geophysics, electrical resistivity tomography uses electrodes on the surface of the earth or in bore holes to locate resistivity anomalies, and in industrial process monitoring the arrays of electrodes are for instance use to monitor mixtures of conductive fluids in vessels or pipes.

This method is used in Industrial Process Imaging for imaging conductive fluids.