Life cycle assessment for the production of MSWI fly-ash based porous glass-ceramics: Scenarios based on the contribution of silica sources, methane aided, and energy recoveries.

Waste Manag

Department of Applied Science and Technology, Politecnico di Torino, Corso Duca Degli Abruzzi 24, 10129 Turin, TO, Italy. Electronic address:

Published: February 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The amount of garbage produced around the world has gone up by 60% recently.
  • Burning this garbage (called incineration) helps reduce its size and can also create energy, but it produces hazardous ashes that can harm the environment.
  • A new study shows a way to safely turn these ashes into useful glass-like materials using a process called vitrification, which is better for the environment when using certain types of materials.

Article Abstract

Municipal solid waste (MSW) production in the world has increased by 60 % in recent years. Incineration of MSW reduces their volume in conjunction with energy recovery. Incineration produces two residues, namely bottom ash (BA) and fly ash (FA), with high concentration of heavy metals and organic pollutants, especially for FA, making them an environmental concern. Vitrification is a costly, highly safe high temperature treatment, ensuring encapsulation of heavy metals. FA vitrification requires a source of silica to be able to get vitrified. In this study, we have proposed valorizing treated (vitrified) FA through the production of porous glass-ceramics, subsequently to MSWI. The entire process, from incineration to glass-ceramics production, was evaluated for several scenarios by Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) using Sima Pro 9.0. Three main scenarios were analysed; each one considering a different silica source: bottom ash (BA), glass cullet (G) and silica sand (S), and for each scenario, three thermal recovery subscenarios were assumed: no thermal recovery used to heat FA prior to vitrification (N), heating FA prior to vitrification using incineration gases thermal recovery (T) and methane-combustion-aided thermal recovery, which exploits methane combustion to further increase the gases temperature (M). Results proved that vitrification was a technically feasible and environmentally-energetically sustainable technology. The result indicates that the most eco-sustainable scenario was using bottom ashes as a silica source together with methane-combustion-aided recovery: 0.467 kgCO, 5.83 × 10 carcinogenic-CTUh and 9.26 MJ required per kg of glass-ceramics produced.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wasman.2022.12.013DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

thermal recovery
16
life cycle
8
cycle assessment
8
porous glass-ceramics
8
bottom ash
8
heavy metals
8
silica source
8
prior vitrification
8
recovery
6
silica
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!