CHG 519 Environmental Pollution Engineering: Solid Waste Management
CHG 519 Environmental Pollution Engineering: Solid Waste Management
Module VII
Solid Waste Management
1
General approach to solid waste
Open dumping
pest and health hazard
– flies, roaches, rats can transmit
all kinds of diseases
Sanitary landfill
where the refuse deposited,
compacted and covered with
earth at the end of the day’s
operation.
- Area method
- Trench method
2
Problems associated with landfills
3
A typical landfill site
5
6
7
Once the landfill is full
After use – after site has stabilised it can be used as sports ground,
golf courses, open storage, or vehicle parking lot.
8
Landfill gas composition against time (next slide for description)
9
Description of slide 6
Phase 1 –Aerobic - oxygen level falls from 20% to zero, and CO2 rises from 0 to around
20%, N2 drops and settlement rises from zero to around 30%
Phase 2 – Anaerobic - CO2 continues to rise to a peak of about 75%, H2 is generated,
reaches a peak of about 20%, N2 drops to about 15% and settlement rises to 95%
Phase 3 –CO2 falls steeply and then gradually to about 50%, H2 falls back to 0, N2 falls to
about 5% . Methane begins to appear and rises to around 50% at the end of this
stage.
Phase 4 –(occurs 3 - 6months after dumping waste) Methane continues to rise to about 60%,
where it remains for most of this phase (15 – 30 yrs) before it drops to zero , CO2 is
fairly constant at around 40%, N2 is about zero for most of this phase, and begins
to climb as methane level falls. (Small quantities can be produced for up to 100yrs)
Phase 5 – in the final stage, aerobic conditions become established, with O2 levels rising
from 0 to 20% and CO2 reducing to 0. N2 climbs back to 80% and settlement
completes its gradual rise to 100%.
By the end of phase 5, the landfill is fully stabilized and
its potential for pollution has ceased
10
General approach to solid waste -
contd
Incineration
11
Typical values for incineration
12
13
Gas cleaning from incineration –
to prevent turning a solid waste problem to an air pollution problem
problem
- lime and Activated carbon are added (lime lime reacts with SO2 to form gypsum and
the AC traps all kinds of formed species, esp dioxins and furans)
14
Anaerobic Digestion of organic waste
AD of orgainc waste gives 55 -77% methane, along with CO2, H2S, NH3,
particles and water. Depending on the end-use of the biogas (see slide 8), post
treatment (see slide 9) might be necessary to upgrade the biogas to a purity of
>97%.
15
Biogas utilization purposes and required upgrading methods
16
Common biogas upgrading Technologies
17
Composting- used for food waste
2V [Vegetable-
[Vegetable-to-
to-Vegetable Model]-
Model]- composting closes the organic matter cycle
18
Recycle/Reuse
Metals are an essential part of modern society – buildings, vehicles, household
utilities, equipment, industrial plants, machines, electronic devices,
devices, etc, etc
Metals come from mineral ore which are natural resources mined from the
earth's crust, and to get 1 unit of metal, 100 units of ore might
might need to be
processed.
19
General approach to solid waste -
contd
Recycle/Reuse
Recovery of materials from solid waste pays, as recycling saves so much energy e.g.
20 recycled aluminum (soft drink cans) uses only 2 -3 % of the energy required to make new
aluminum from bauxite
Waste reduction/reuse pays
The University buys 4200 reams (11 tonnes) of paper each year
at a cost of N84,000 per ream. Of this, 30% ends up in letters,
reports, etc. that are delivered to staff or stored. The rest is
disposed of to a LAWMA that charges N4500 per tonne to
collect and landfill the paper. Compare the cost of the following
scenarios:
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Solution
1. The annual cost of buying the paper is:
N84000 x 11 = N924000
the annual cost of disposing of 70% of it is:
N4500 X 11 X 0.7 = N34650, say N34700
So the total cost of scenario (1) is N924000 + N 34700 = N958700 per year
2. The University’s paper consumption falls to 90% of its previous level, so its annual
purchasing cost reduces to:
N924000 X 0.9 = N831600
there is also an equivalent saving in the annual disposal cost
N34700 X 0.9 = N31230, say N31200
so the total cost of scenario (2) is N831600 + N31200 = N862800 per year. Which is an
annual savings of N95900 compared with scenario (1)
3. The cost of buying the paper remains N831600 per year, but instead of a disposal cost of
N31200 there is now an annual income of:
N1000 X 0.9 X11 X 0.7 = N6930, say N6900
so the total cost of scenario (3) is N831600 – N6900 = N824700 per year. This represents
an annual saving of N134000 compared with scenario (1), or approximately 14%
22
No longer waste management but resource management,
that is, think not of it as something to be disposed of but
as a resource to be used
23
Hierarchy of management options
24
Industrial waste Management
25
OECD – Organisation for Economic cooperation and development
IMPEL – EU network for the implementation and enforcement of Environmental Law
26
Hazardous Waste Management Options
27 27
Solving the environmental Problem
How?
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