SWMT Unit 1 PPT-1
SWMT Unit 1 PPT-1
SWMT Unit 1 PPT-1
16CH350
Course Outcomes:
Solid wastes are the wastes arising from human and animal activities that are
normally solid and are discarded as useless or unwanted. This unavoidably places
an enormous strain on natural resources and seriously undermines efficient and
sustainable development
Municipal solid waste (MSW)
Municipal solid waste (MSW) includes wastes such as durable goods, nondurable
goods, containers and packaging, food wastes yard wastes, and miscellaneous
inorganic wastes from residential, commercial, institutional, and industrial sources.
Example of waste from these categories include appliances, newspapers,
clothing, food scarps, boxes, disposable tableware, office and classroom paper,
wood pallets, and cafeteria wastes. MSW does not include wastes from sources
such as municipal sludge, combustion ash, and industrial non-hazardous process
wastes that might also be disposed of in municipal waste landfills or incinerators.
Classification of solid waste
Solid wastes are the organic and inorganic waste materials such as product
packaging, grass clippings, furniture, clothing, bottles, kitchen refuse, paper,
appliances, paint cans, batteries, etc., produced in a society, which do not
generally carry any value to the first user. Solid wastes, thus, encompass both a
heterogeneous mass of wastes from the urban community as well as a more
homogeneous accumulation of agricultural, industrial and mineral wastes.
• Source-based classification
• Type-based classification
Source-based classification
(i) Residential: This refers to wastes from dwellings, apartments, etc., and consists
of leftover food, vegetable peels, plastic, clothes, ashes, etc.
(ii) Commercial: This refers to wastes consisting of leftover food, glasses, metals,
ashes, etc., generated from stores, restaurants, markets, hotels, motels, auto-
repair shops, medical facilities, etc.
(iii)
Institutional: This mainly consists of paper, plastic, glasses, etc.,
generated from educational, administrative and public buildings such as
schools, colleges, offices, prisons, etc.
(iv) Municipal: This includes dust, leafy matter, building debris, treatment
plant residual sludge, etc., generated from various municipal activities like
construction and demolition, street cleaning, landscaping, etc. (Note,
however, in India municipal can typically subsume items at (i) to (iii) above).
(vii) Open areas: this includes wastes from areas such as Streets, alleys,
parks, vacant lots, playgrounds, beaches, highways, recreational areas, etc.
Type-based classification
(i) Garbage: This refers to animal and vegetable wastes resulting from the handling,
sale, storage, preparation, cooking and serving of food. Garbage comprising these
wastes contains putrescible (rotting) organic matter, which produces an obnoxious
odour and attracts rats and other vermin. It, therefore, requires special attention in
storage, handling and disposal.
(ii) Ashes and residues: These are substances remaining from the burning of
wood, coal, charcoal, coke and other combustible materials for cooking and heating
in houses, institutions and small industrial establishments. When produced in large
quantities, as in power-generation plants and factories, these are classified as
industrial wastes. Ashes consist of fine powdery residue, cinders and clinker often
mixed with small pieces of metal and glass. Since ashes and residues are almost
entirely inorganic, they are valuable in landfills.
(iii) Combustible and non-combustible wastes: These consist of wastes
generated from households, institutions, commercial activities, etc., excluding food
wastes and other highly putrescible material. Typically, while combustible material
consists of paper, cardboard, textile, rubber, garden trimmings, etc., non-combustible
material consists of such items as glass, crockery, tin and aluminium cans, ferrous
and non-ferrous material and dirt.
(iv) Bulky wastes: These include large household appliances such as refrigerators,
washing machines, furniture, crates, vehicle parts, tyres, wood, trees and branches.
Since these household wastes cannot be accommodated in normal storage
containers, they require a special collection mechanism.
(v) Street wastes: These refer to wastes that are collected from streets, walkways,
alleys, parks and vacant plots, and include paper, cardboard, plastics, dirt, leaves
and other vegetable matter. Littering in public places is indeed a widespread and
acute problem in many countries including India, and a solid waste management
system must address this menace appropriately
vi) Biodegradable and non-biodegradable wastes: Biodegradable wastes mainly
refer to substances consisting of organic matter such as leftover food, vegetable
and fruit peels, paper, textile, wood, etc., generated from various household and
industrial activities. Because of the action of micro-organisms, these wastes are
degraded from complex to simpler compounds. Non-biodegradable wastes consist
of inorganic and recyclable materials such as plastic, glass, cans, metals, etc. Table
1.1 below shows a comparison of biodegradable and non-biodegradable wastes
with their degeneration time, i.e., the time required to break from a complex to a
simple biological form.
vi) Dead animals: With regard to municipal wastes, dead animals are those that die
naturally or are accidentally killed on the road. Note that this category does not
include carcasses and animal parts from slaughter-houses, which are regarded as
industrial wastes. Dead animals are divided into two groups – large and small.
Among the large animals are horses, cows, goats, sheep, pigs, etc., and among the
small ones are dogs, cats, rabbits, rats, etc. The reason for this differentiation is that
large animals require special equipment for lifting and handling when they are
removed. If not collected promptly, dead animals pose a threat to public health since
they attract flies and other vermin as they decay. Their presence in public places is
particularly offensive from the aesthetic point of view as well
.
(viii) Abandoned vehicles: This category includes automobiles, trucks
and trailers that are abandoned on streets and other public places.
However, abandoned vehicles have significant scrap value for their metal,
and their value to collectors is highly variable.
(x) Farm wastes: These wastes result from diverse agricultural activities
such as planting, harvesting, production of milk, rearing of animals for
slaughter and the operation of feedlots. In many areas, the disposal of
animal waste has become a critical problem, especially from feedlots,
poultry farms and dairies.
(xi) Hazardous wastes: Hazardous wastes are those defined as wastes
of industrial, institutional or consumer origin that are potentially dangerous
either immediately or over a period of time to human beings and the
environment. This is due to their physical, chemical and biological or
radioactive characteristics like ignitability, corrosivity, reactivity and
toxicity. Note that in some cases, the active agents may be liquid or
gaseous hazardous wastes. These are, nevertheless, classified as solid
wastes as they are confined in solid containers. Typical examples of
hazardous wastes are empty containers of solvents, paints and
pesticides, which are frequently mixed with municipal wastes and become
part of the urban waste stream. Certain hazardous wastes may cause
explosions in incinerators and fires at landfill sites. Others such as
pathological wastes from hospitals and radioactive wastes also require
special handling. Effective management practices should ensure that
hazardous wastes are stored, collected, transported and disposed of
separately, preferably after suitable treatment to render them harmless.
(xii) Sewage wastes: The solid by-products of sewage treatment are
classified as sewage wastes. They are mostly organic and derived from
the treatment of organic sludge separated from both raw and treated
sewages. The inorganic fraction of raw sewage such as grit and
eggshells is separated at the preliminary stage of treatment, as it may
entrain putrescible organic matter with pathogens and must be buried
without delay. The bulk of treated, dewatered sludge is useful as a soil
conditioner but is invariably uneconomical. Solid sludge, therefore, enters
the stream of municipal wastes, unless special arrangements are made
for its disposal
Factors that influence the quantity of municipal wastes
generated include:
Geographic location
Collection frequency
Characteristics of populace
Public attitudes
Legislation
Solid Waste Characteristics
• Physical and chemical composition of solid wastes vary depending on
sources and types of solid wastes.
• The nature of the deposited waste in a landfill will affect gas and leachate
production and composition by virtue of relative proportions of degradable
and non-degradeable components, the moisture content and the specific
nature of the bio-degradeable element.
• The waste composition will effect both the bulk gases and the trace
components.
Chemical Characteristics
Physical Characteristics
Proximate analysis
Chemical Characteristics Fusing point of ash
Ultimate analysis
Energy content
Physical Characteristics
Density/Specific weight Color
Moisture content Voids
Particle size Shape of components
Size distribution Optical property
Field capacity Magnetic properties
Compacted waste porosity Electric properties
Physical Characteristics
Information and data on the physical characteristics of solid wastes are
important for the selection and operation of equipment and for the analysis
and design of disposal facilities.
Density of waste, i.e. its mass per unit volume (kg/m3) is a critical factor in the
design of a SWM system e.g., the design of sanitary landfills, storage, types of
collection and transport vehicles etc.
In other words, a waste collection vehicle can haul four times the weight of
waste in its compacted state than when it is uncompacted.
Note that:
• the effect of increasing the moisture content of the waste is detrimental in
the sense that dry density decreases at higher moisture levels
• soil-cover plays an important role in containing the waste
• there is an upper limit to the density, and the conservative estimate of in-
place density for waste in a sanitary landfill is about 600 kg/m3
Physical Characteristics
Moisture content:
Moisture content is defined as the ratio of the weight of water (wet weight - dry
weight) to the total weight of the wet waste.
Moisture increases the weight of solid wastes and thereby, the cost of collection
and transport.
In the main, wastes should be insulated from rainfall or other extraneous water.
Physical Characteristics
We can calculate the moisture percentage, using the formula given below:
Size:
The size and size distribution of the component materials in solid wastes are
an important consideration in the recovery of materials especially with
mechanical means such as trommel screens and magnetic separators.
Generally, the results of size distribution analysis are expressed in the manner
used for soil particle analysis.
That is to say, they are expressed as a plot of particle size (mm) against
percentage, less than a given value.
Physical Characteristics
Size:
The size of waste component may be defined by one or more of the following
measures:
SC l
l w
SC
2
Where
SC
l w h
3 SC = size of component in mm
l= length in mm
SC l w w = width in mm
1 h = height in mm
2
SC l w h
1
3
Physical Characteristics
• The major means of controlling particle size is through shredding.
• Particle size will also influence waste packing densities and particle size
reduction (by shredding) could increase biogas production through the
increased surface area available to degradation by bacteria.
• But the smaller particles allow higher packing density which decrease water
movement, bacterial movement and the bacterial access to substrate
Physical Characteristics
• Optical property can be used to segregate opaque materials from
transparent substances which would predominately contain glass and
plastic.
Field capacity:
The field capacity of MSW is the total amount of moisture which can be
retained in a waste sample subject to gravitational pull.
Field capacity varies with the degree of applied pressure and the state of
decomposition of the wastes.
Physical Characteristics
Permeability depends on the other properties of the solid material include pore
size distribution, surface area and porosity.
The intrinsic permeability depends solely on the properties of the solid material
including pore size distribution, tortuosity, specific surface and porosity.
Typical values for the intrinsic permeability for compacted solid waste in a
landfill are in the range between about 10-11 and 10-12 m2 in the vertical
direction and about 10-10 m2 in the horizontal direction.
Porosity:
The porosity of MSW varies typically from 0.40 to 0.67 depending on the
compaction and composition of the waste.
Compressibility of MSW:
Lipids:
This class of compounds includes fats, oils and grease and the principal
sources of lipids are garbage, cooking oils and fats.
Lipids have high heating values, about 38,000 kJ/kg (kilojoules per kilogram),
which makes waste with high lipid content suitable for energy recovery.
Since lipids become liquid at temperatures slightly above ambient, they add to
the liquid content during waste decomposition.
These are found primarily in food and yard wastes, which encompass sugar
and polymer of sugars (e.g., starch, cellulose, etc.) with general formula
(CH2O)x.
Decomposing carbohydrates attract flies and rats and therefore, should not be
left exposed for long duration.
Proteins:
These are compounds containing carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen and
consist of an organic acid with a substituted amine group (NH2).
They are mainly found in food and garden wastes. The partial decomposition
of these compounds can result in the production of amines that have
unpleasant odours.
Chemical Characteristics
Natural fibres:
These are found in paper products, food and yard wastes and include the
natural compounds, cellulose and lignin that are resistant to biodegradation.
(Note that paper is almost 100% cellulose, cotton over 95% and wood
products over 40%.)
Because they are a highly combustible solid waste, having a high proportion of
paper and wood products, they are suitable for incineration.
Hence the increasing attention being paid to the recycling of plastics to reduce
the proportion of this waste component at disposal sites.
Plastics have a high heating value, about 32,000 kJ/kg, which makes them
very suitable for incineration.
But, you must note that polyvinyl chloride (PVC), when burnt, produces dioxin
and acid gas.
The latter increases corrosion in the combustion system and is responsible for
acid rain..
Chemical Characteristics
Non-combustibles:
This class includes glass, ceramics, metals, dust and ashes, and accounts for
12 – 25% of dry solids.
The energy content of the organic components in MSW can be determined (1)
by using a full scale boiler as a calorimeter (2) by using a laboratory bomb
calorimeter, and (3) by calculation, if the elemental composition is known.
An evaluation of the potential of waste material for use as fuel for incineration
requires a determination of its heating value expressed as kilojoules per
kilogram (kJ/kg).
Since the test temperature is below the boiling point of water (100 0C), the
combustion water remains in the liquid state.
For example:
• Organic material yields energy only when dry.
• The moisture content in the waste reduces the dry organic material per
kilogram of waste and requires a significant amount of energy for drying.
• The ash content of the waste reduces the proportion of dry organic
material per kilogram of waste and retains some heat when removed
from the furnace.
Chemical Characteristics
Ultimate analysis:
• Note that other metals (e.g., iron, magnesium, etc.) may also be present
but they are non-toxic.
In the absence of such equipment chemical formula for solid waste can be
calculated.
• ash which adds weight without generating any heat during combustion
• volatile matter i.e. that portion of the waste that is converted to gases
before and during combustion
The fusing point ash is defined as that temperature at which the ash resulting
from the burning of waste will form a solid (clinker) by fusion and
agglomeration.
Typical fusing temperature for the formation of clinker from solid waste range
from 2000 to 2200 oF (1100 to 1200 oC).
Example: Estimation of the chemical composition of a solid waste sample.
Determine the chemical composition of the organic fraction, without and with
sulfur and without and with water of a residential MSW with the typical
composition shown in Table
Component Wet MC % by weight (Dry Basis)
weight %
C H O N S Ash
Food Waste 9 70 48 6.4 37.6 2.6 0.4 5.0
Paper 34 6 43.5 6.0 44 0.3 0.2 6.0
Card Board 6.0 5 44 5.9 44.6 0.3 0.2 5.0
Plastics 7.0 2 60.0 7.2 22.8 - - 10
Textiles 2 10 55 6.6 31.2 4.6 - 2.5
Rubber 0.5 2 78 10 - 2.0 - 10
Leather 0.5 10 60 8.0 11.6 10 - 10
Yard Waste 18.5 60 47.8 6 38 3.4 0.3 4.5
Wood 2.0 20 49.5 6 42.7 0.2 0.1 1.5
Component Wet Dry Composition, lb
weight, Weight,
lb lb
C H O N S Ash
Food waste 9 2.7 1.3 0.17 1.02 0.07 0.01 0.14
Yard wastes 18.5 7.4 3.11 0.39 2.47 0.22 0.02 0.29
The production of odours and the generation of flies are also related to the
putrescible nature of the organic materials found in MSW (e.g., food wastes).
Biological Properties of MSW
Excluding plastic, rubber and leather components, the organic fraction of most
MSW can be classified as follows:
Volatile solids (VS) content, determined by ignition at 550 oC, is often used as a
measure of the biodegradability of the organic fraction of MSW.
BF = 0.83 – 0.028 LC
Wastes with high lignin contents, such as newsprint, are significantly less
biodegradable than the other organic wastes found in MSW.
Waste Characteristics