Municipal sewage sludge (MSS) is formed during wastewater treatment and its processing and disposal represent one of the most environmentally challenging aspects of the wastewater treating process. One disposal option currently being considered is a process involving heat treatment (to render the sludge biologically inactive) followed by dewatering, drying, pulverizing, and combustion. This research focuses on fine particle emissions from the combustion of dried, treated, MSS, cofired with either natural gas or pulverized Ohio bituminous coal as a supplemental fuel. These fuels were burned at 13 kW in a downflow laboratory combustor designed to replicate time/temperature histories and particle concentrations typical of practical combustion units yet also sufficiently well defined aerodynamically to allow elucidation of mechanisms. Size-segregated particle size distributions were obtained by isokinetic sampling followed by dilution/quenching and passage into a Berner Low-Pressure Impactor. Major and trace elements were analyzed by flame and graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy. Four particle size regions were identified: furnace vapor-phase material that formed ultrafine particles either in or just before the sampling probe, submicron-sized particles formed during the combustion process, micron-sized fine particles, and larger supermicron sized bulk fly ash particles. The fuel mix appears to influence trace metal partitioning routes and the composition of fine particulate matter in the exhaust. Cofiring of MSS with coal increases the ultrafine/submicron particle emission compared to firing coal alone. This increase in ultrafine/submicron particles is most likely due to an interaction between species derived from MSS (possibly alkali metals) and those from coal (possibly sulfur and/or chlorine). Vapor-to-solid phase partitioning of arsenic and selenium is controlled by surface reaction with active surface sites during MSS combustion with either gas or coal. Co-combustion of MSS with the Ohio bituminous coal allows the arsenic and selenium to be reactively scavenged by calcium, thus changing the speciation of the trace metal emitted. Ohio bituminous coal alone contained insufficient calcium to accomplish this same scavenging effect.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es0113091 | DOI Listing |
J Air Waste Manag Assoc
November 2012
School ofEnergy, Environmental, Biological, and Medical Engineering, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio 45221-0012, USA.
The characteristics of petroleum-contaminated sediment (PCS) have been evaluated to assess whether the practice of its beneficial reuse as a sole or supplemental energy source is sustainable relative to other sediment remediation options such as monitored natural recovery (MNR), capping, or off-site disposal. Some of these remediation options for PCS are energy-intensive and/or require land utilization. The energy and compositional analysis results indicate a low carbon content (15-17%(wt)) and corresponding low energy values of 5,200 kJ/kg (2,200 Btu/lb) to 5,600 kJ/kg (2,400 Btu/lb).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Technol
June 2002
Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, University of Arizona, Tucson 85721-0011, USA.
Municipal sewage sludge (MSS) is formed during wastewater treatment and its processing and disposal represent one of the most environmentally challenging aspects of the wastewater treating process. One disposal option currently being considered is a process involving heat treatment (to render the sludge biologically inactive) followed by dewatering, drying, pulverizing, and combustion. This research focuses on fine particle emissions from the combustion of dried, treated, MSS, cofired with either natural gas or pulverized Ohio bituminous coal as a supplemental fuel.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Technol
September 2001
National Exposure Research Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268, USA.
Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP/MS) with direct injection nebulization (DIN) was used to evaluate novel impinger solution compositions capable of capturing elemental mercury (Hg0) in EPA Method 5 type sampling. An iodine based impinger solution proved to be very efficient for Hg0 capture and was amenable to direct analysis by DIN-ICP/MS. Hg0 capture efficiency using aqueous iodine (I3-) was comparable to Hg0 capture using acidified potassium permanganate impinger solutions which were analyzed by cold vapor atomic absorption spectrometry (CVAAS), with greater than 98% capture of Hg0 in the first oxidizing impinger.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chromatogr Sci
February 1998
Department of Chemistry, Ohio State University, Columbus 43210, USA.
A comparison among supercritical fluid extraction (SFE), modified SFE, enhanced-fluidity extraction, and accelerated solvent extraction (ASE) techniques was made for the extraction of polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) from an aged, spiked bituminous coal fly ash. Non-ASE extraction techniques used in this study could not recover PAHs with molecular weights greater than that of pyrene. ASE techniques using methylene chloride (with and without a static step) and toluene were able to recover most of the PAHs studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Air Waste Manag Assoc
March 1998
b U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Risk Management Research Laboratory , Cincinnati , Ohio , USA.
The injection of powdered activated carbon (PAC) into combustion flue gas, with subsequent collection in a particulate control device, and granular activated carbon (GAC) fixed-bed adsorption offer new promise for achieving high-quality air emissions with respect to elemental mercury concentrations. One of the key parameters that governs the applicability of adsorption technology to flue gas cleanup is the rate of vapor-phase mercury removal, which was the main focus of this study. The kinetics of vapor-phase mercury uptake by a virgin bituminous coal-based activated carbon (BPL), a commercially available sulfur impregnated activated carbon (HGR), and a BPL carbon impregnated with sulfur at 600 C (BPL-S) was evaluated as a function of temperature and elemental mercury concentration.
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