Briefly, no. Sorry. But to be honest, its a little hard to understand your application. You've mentioned solvent extraction. Fair enough. People do 2 or 3 extractions, and that's for a reason, if you extract say 90% each time, you only get say, 90 + 9 + 0.9 after 3 extractions, there's no value in doing it more than that. (damn, but I've forgotten the technical term for that.)
I also don't understand your description of waste handling procedures. First of all, aqueous waste and solvent waste are handled separately. In many laboratories, aqueous waste travels through a lime pit, the layer of CaO produces a small constant amount of CaOH, which is a strong base, and precipitates metal ions, and other things. Before release into the sewage system or the environment, the waste water is titrated, by an automated or manual method, to some neutral pH, say pH 6-9, the system can handle. Solids are disposed of here.
Solvents may be recycled by distillation, or burned. Again solid residues are disposed of as solid waste.
The pH solvent extractions make for a good basic orgainic chemistry experiment, teaching a new student how to understand organic acids and bases. But its not really big in industry. For example:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solvent_extraction#Multistage_countercurrent_continuous_processes