بسم هللا الرحمن الرحیم
Solid & Hazardous Waste Management
Kandahar University
Engineering Faculty
Water and Environmental Engineering Department
Chapter 2. Municipal Solid Waste Characteristics and
Quantities
1
Agenda
Definitions
Municipal Solid Waste Generation
Municipal Solid Waste Characteristics
Composition by Identifiable Items
Moisture Content
Particle Size
Chemical Composition
Heat Value
Bulk and Material Density
Mechanical Properties
Biodegradability
2
Introduction
A great deal of confusion exists in the definitions related to solid
waste, and this leads directly to disagreements on quantities and
composition. There are both gross and subtle differences in the type
and sources of such material, which pose a question as to what is and
is not solid.
3
Definitions
MSW components: • Household hazardous
Mixed household waste Recyclables, such as: waste
Newspapers • Commercial waste
Aluminum cans • Yard (or green) waste
Milk cartons • Litter and waste from
Plastic soft drink bottles community trash cans
Steel cans • Bulky items
Corrugated cardboard
(refrigerators, rugs, etc.)
Other material collected by the community
• Construction and
demolition waste 4
Continue Definitions
Often these wastes are defined by the way they are collected
• Mixed household wastes are collected by trucks specially built for
that purpose.
• Recyclables are collected either with the mixed waste in a separate
compartment
• Yard waste may be collected with the household waste or placed
separately in a dedicated vehicle
• Commercial wastes use large containers that are emptied into
specially built trucks
5
Continue Definitions
.
Construction and demolition wastes are collected in roll-off stationary
containers that remain on the job site until full.
Bulky items are commonly collected on an “as needed” basis by larger
trucks capable of handling large items.
Household hazardous wastes are collected periodically by the
community.
6
Continue Definitions
Refuse include Refuse does not include
Solid waste generated by households • Construction and demolition debris
Recyclables • Water and wastewater treatment
plant sludge's
Household hazardous
• Leaves and other green waste
Yard (or green) waste
collected from community streets
Litter and community trash
and parks
Commercial waste • Bulky items such as large
appliances, hulks of old cars, tree
limbs,
7
Continue Definitions
(MSW) = (refuse) + (C & D waste) + (leaves) + (bulky items)
(as-generated refuse) = (as-collected refuse) + (diverted refuse)
The objective is to increase the life of a landfill or to reduce the cost of
disposal.
EPA has challenged communities to increase their diversion to 35% up
from the 25% originally suggested in 1988. California has set an even
higher goal of 50% diversion.
8
Example 2 -1
A community produces the following waste on an annual basis:
9
Continue E x a m p l e 2 –1
The recyclables are collected separately and processed at a materials
recovery facility. The mixed household waste and the commercial waste
go to the landfill. The leaves are composted, and the C & D wastes are
processed and used on the next project. Calculate the diversion?
10
S o l u t i o n 2.1
If the calculation is on the basis of MSW, the total waste generated is
434 tons per year. If everything not going to the landfill is
counted as having been diverted, the diversion is calculated as:
11
Municipal Solid Waste Generation
Table 2-1 shows the amount of MSW generated from 1960 to 2008
and how it has been managed.
12
Continue Municipal Solid Waste Generation
13
Continue Municipal Solid Waste Generation
The generation of refuse in a community also varies throughout the
year.
14
Municipal Solid Waste Characteristics
As long as the MSW is to be disposed of by landfill, there is little need to
analyses the waste, including problems of :
Special (hazardous) materials
Amount of organic material
Amount of recycling material
if materials or energy recovery by combustion is the objective, it becomes
necessary to have a better picture of the solid waste.
15
1. Composition by Identifiable Items
Municipal solid waste composition studies are essential for proper
waste management for a variety of reasons including:
• Need to estimate materials recycling potential
• Identify sources
• To facilitate the design of the processing equipment.
The composition of generated waste is extremely variable as a
consequence of seasonal, geographic, and social impacts.
16
Continue Composition by Identifiable Items
The 2008 EPA estimates of national waste composition based on such
data are shown in Table 2-3
17
Waste composition in Afghanistan, Kuala Lumpur, Dhaka, China,
Katmandu, Bangkok, Manila, India, Karachi
Waste composition Categories in developing countries (average percentage of wet weight)
Textile
Food & Mix Mix Rubber Yard
City & Wood ferrous Glass Other
Organic Plastic Paper wastes
leather
Afghanistan
34.5 10 7 2.5 N/A N/A N/A 4 6 36
(Kandahar)
Malaysia
(Kuala 41.1 9.13 7.78 3.48 1.24 2.69 3.09 0.17 1.62 0.25
Lumpur)
Indonesia 69 8 10 2 2 3 1.3 2 2 0.7
Dhaka 70 4.7 4.3 4.6 N/A N/A N/A 0.1 0.3 16
China 49 16 16 2 2 N/A N/A 2 2 10
Katmandu 64.24 15.96 8.66 3.4 1.12 N/A N/A 1.72 3.75 1.15
Bangkok 53 19 9 7 N/A N/A N/A 1 3 8
Manila 49 17 19 N/A N/A N/A N/A 6 9
India 42 4 6 4 2 0.5 N/A 2 2 37.5
Karachi 39 7 10 7 N/A N/A N/A 1 2 32
18
Measuring Composition by Manual Sampling
Sampling studies for characterizing refuse must be designed so as to
produce the most useful and accurate data for the least cost and effort.
The two variables of importance in designing such a study are sample size
and the method of characterizing the refuse. Although manual sampling is
still the only truly reliable way of estimating composition.
19
20
Moisture Content
A transfer of moisture takes place in the garbage can. And truck, and
thus, the moisture content of various components changes with time.
The moisture content be comes important when the refuse is
processed in to fuel or when it is fired directly.
21
22
Example 2 –2
A residential waste has the following components:
Paper 50%
Glass 20%
Food 20%
Yard waste 10%
Estimate its moisture concentration using the typical values in Table 2-5
Solution
23
Particle Size
Any mixture of particles of various sizes is difficult to describe
analytically. If these particles are irregularly shaped, the problem is
compounded. Municipal refuse is possibly the worst imaginable
material for particle size analysis, and yet much of the MSW
processing technology depends on an accurate description of
particle size.
24
Chemical Composition
The economic recovery of materials and/or energy often depends on
the chemical composition of the refuse.
Two common means of defining the chemical composition of refuse
are the proximate analysis and the ultimate analysis. Both
descriptions were originally developed for solid fuels, especially
coal.
The proximate analysis define the fraction of volatile organics and
fixed carbon in the fuel, …
29
Continue Chemical Composition
• while the ultimate analysis is based on elemental compositions.
26
Heat Value
The heat values of refuse are of some importance in resource recovery.
Some published values for several fuels are shown in Table 2-7 to
illustrate the variability of the fuels according to how they are derived.
In common American engineering language, heat value is expressed as
Btu/lb of refuse, while the proper SI designation is kJ/kg. Commonly,
the heat values of refuse and other heterogeneous materials are
measured with a calorimeter.
30
Continue Heat Value
• Refuse can be characterized as being made up of organic
materials, inorganic materials, and water. Usually, the heat value
is expressed in terms of all three components (the Btu/lb).
31
29
Example .3
30
Bulk and Material Density
Municipal solid waste has a highly variable bulk density, depending
on the pressure applied.
Loose, as it might be placed in to a garbage can by the home owner,
the bulk density of MSW might be between 150 and 250 lb/yd3
(90 and 150kg/m3); pushed in to the can, it might be at 300lb /
yd3 (180 kg/m3).
3132
Continue Bulk and Material Density
In a collection truck that compacts the refuse, the bulk density is
normally between 600 and 700 lb/yd3 (350 and 420 kg/m3).
Once deposited in a landfill and compacted with machinery, it can
achieve bulk densities of about 1200 lb/yd3 (700 kg/m3).
As 1700 lb/yd3 (1000 kg/m3) for a landfill where thin layers of
refuse are compacted. Such landfills are quite dense.
32 33
Mechanical Properties
36The compressive strength of some typical MSW constituents is
shown in Figure 2-13. A wide variation exists in the amount of energy
necessary to obtain volume reduction.
33
34
Biodegradability
• From Table 2-3 the fraction of municipal solid waste that is
organic can be listed as in Table 2-11. Using calculated and
estimated percentages of degradation.
• Table 2-11 shows that only about 45% of MSW is potentially
biodegradable.
35
Continue Biodegradability
Treatment techniques (such as composting) must take in to account
that a large fraction of MSW is not biodegradable and that this
material must be disposed of by means other than producing useful
products using biodegradation.
36
Continue Biodegradability
37
Final Thoughts
Continued implementation of reduction, reuse, recycling, and
resource recovery systems will reduce both the extraction of raw
material and the quantities of waste disposed into our
environment.
Steps
Gather existing data
Identify waste generation sources & characteristics
Develop waste categories
Develop sampling methodology
Conduct field studies
Conduct market surveys for special wastes
Measure factors affecting waste generation rates 38
Thanks from your attention
&
Question
39