2015 ◽  
Vol 53 (5) ◽  
pp. 454-464 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenya YAMAMOTO ◽  
Mitsuhiro KUDO ◽  
Heihachiro ARITO ◽  
Yasutaka OGAWA ◽  
Tsutomu TAKATA

2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 4-9
Author(s):  
V.V. Semenov ◽  
V.I. Zhdanov ◽  
I.Yu. Veretennikov ◽  
A.Yu. Hil’

The development of a mobile waste incineration plant designed for the recovery of garbage dumps located near towns and villages, from where the removal of garbage to the city to the incineration plant is not profitable due to the large remoteness of small settlements from the city. The installation has two combustion zones: in the 1st zone, the combustion process of solid municipal waste (MSW) is achieved at temperatures up to 600 °C, and in the second zone – up to 1200 °C. Afterburning of flue gas to reduce the formation of dioxins, furans and soot is provided.


Author(s):  
Heiner Zwahr

Waste to energy is only one way of handling waste, material recovery is another aspect of sustainable waste management. This is actually nothing new and has always been part of the operation of WTE (Waste to Energy) plants in Hamburg. In descriptions of the first waste incineration plant in Hamburg, which started operation in 1896, it was stated that “the fly ash” collected in the ash chambers was used as filler material for the insulation of ceiling cavities. Its use in the sandwich walls of money safes was expressly recommended by the members of the urban refuse collection authority. Another lucrative trade was the sorting of scrap iron. It was separated from the incineration slag with magnets. The slag itself was said to be as sterile as lava, as hard as glass, as useful as bricks, and it was a profitable side product of waste incineration. The crushed incinerator slag was evidently so much in demand in road construction and as an aggregate in concrete production that demand could often not be met in the building season, even though it was stored through the winter, [1,2,3].


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