scholarly journals Application of leachate recirculation on the concentration of landfill gases

2021 ◽  
Vol 896 (1) ◽  
pp. 012042
Author(s):  
I B Priyambada ◽  
B Widianarko ◽  
S B Sasongko ◽  
A S Puspita

Abstract Leachate is the product of the biodegradation process in the landfill. On-site treatment of leachate using leachate recirculation is one of the alternative methods to reduce the hazard. The operation of leachate recirculation provides benefits such as speeding up biodegradation, lowering pollutant concentrations, and increasing gas production. This study aims to evaluate the application of leachate recirculation on the concentration of CO2 and CH4 produced. Experiments were performed in a laboratory using 20 lysimeters, with 1 L in volume for 365 days. The lysimeter was divided into two groups, with 10 reactors, each group arranged in series. Leachate recirculation will be given to the second reactor until the tenth reactor, using a high leachate concentration for the first group and a low concentration of leachate for the second. The addition of leachate in the two reactor treatment groups significantly increased the organic content in the leachate. Leachate recirculation does not cause a significant escalation in CO2 and CH4 concentration compared to reactors without leachate recirculation. In the reactor group with high leachate concentrations, reactors with leachate recirculation produced a more stable gas concentration than those without leachate recirculation which produced more volatile CH4 concentration.

2018 ◽  
Vol 45 (6) ◽  
pp. 478-488 ◽  
Author(s):  
Myriam Samson-Dô ◽  
André St-Hilaire

Peat moss harvesting is an important industry in Canada. To harvest peat, the water table of the peatland must be lowered to allow the surficial peat layer to dry and be harvested. Drainage water can contain suspended sediments, so at most harvesting sites, the water is routed through sedimentation basins. This work focuses on characterizing and modelling their trapping efficiency. Eight basins with different volume/watershed area ratios (705 to 4170 m3/km2) were studied in three Quebec regions. Suspended sediment concentration and discharge were monitored up- and downstream of each basin during the ice-free season. Basins with high ratios of volume/drainage area, multiple basin configurations (i.e., two basins in series or in parallel), and those equipped with a flow regulation structure were more efficient than regular basins. Moreover, the nature of sediments (size, decomposition level, and organic content) influences loads, but not the trapping efficiency. Finally, two empirical models developed to predict trapping efficiency of municipal sedimentation basins were tested and adapted for basins that capture peat sediments.


2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (07) ◽  
pp. 57-57
Author(s):  
Leonard Kalfayan

As unconventional oil and gas fields mature, operators and service providers are looking toward, and collaborating on, creative and alternative methods for enhancing production from existing wells, especially in the absence of, or at least the reduction of, new well activity. While oil and gas price environments remain uncertain, recent price-improvement trends are supporting greater field testing and implementation of innovative applications, albeit with caution and with cost savings in mind. Not only is cost-effectiveness a requirement, but cost-reducing applications and solutions can be, too. Of particular interest are applications addressing challenging well-production needs such as reducing or eliminating liquid loading in gas wells; restimulating existing, underperforming wells, including as an alternative to new well drilling and completion; and remediating water blocking and condensate buildup, both of which can impair production from gas wells severely. The three papers featured this month represent a variety of applications relevant to these particular well-production needs. The first paper presents a technology and method for liquid removal to improve gas production and reserves recovery in unconventional, liquid-rich reservoirs using subsurface wet-gas compression. Liquid loading, a recurring issue downhole, can severely reduce gas production and be costly to remediate repeatedly, which can be required. This paper discusses the full technology application process and the supportive results of the first field trial conducted in an unconventional shale gas well. The second paper discusses the application of the fishbone stimulation system and technique in a tight carbonate oil-bearing formation. Fishbone stimulation has been around for several years now, but its best applications and potential have not necessarily been fully understood in the well-stimulation community. This paper summarizes a successful pilot application resulting in a multifold increase in oil-production rate and walks the reader through the details of the pilot candidate selection, completion design, operational challenges, and lessons learned. The third paper introduces and proposes a chemical treatment to alleviate phase trapping in tight carbonate gas reservoirs. Phase trapping can be in the form of water blocking or increasing condensate buildup from near the wellbore and extending deeper into the formation over time. Both can reduce relative permeability to gas severely. Water blocks can be a one-time occurrence from drilling, completion, workover, or stimulation operations and can often be treated effectively with solvent plus proper additive solutions. Similar treatments for condensate banking in gas wells, however, can provide only temporary alleviation, if they are even effective. This paper proposes a technique for longer-term remediation of phase trapping in tight carbonate gas reservoirs using a unique, slowly reactive fluid system. Recommended additional reading at OnePetro: www.onepetro.org. SPE 200345 - Insights Into Field Application of Enhanced-Oil-Recovery Techniques From Modeling of Tight Reservoirs With Complex High-Density Fracture Network by Geng Niu, CGG, et al. SPE 201413 - Diagnostic Fracture Injection Test Analysis and Simulation: A Utica Shale Field Study by Jeffery Hildebrand, The University of Texas at Austin, et al.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yaowen Liu ◽  
Wei Pang ◽  
Jincai Shen ◽  
Ying Mi

Abstract Fuling shale gas field is one of the most successful shale gas play in China. Production logging is one of the vital technologies to evaluate the shale gas contribution in different stages and different clusters. Production logging has been conducted in over 40 wells and most of the operations are successful and good results have been observed. Some previous studies have unveiled one or several wells production logging results in Fuling shale gas play. But production logging results show huge difference between different wells. In order to get better understanding of the results, a comprehensive overview is carried out. The effect of lithology layers, TOC (total organic content), porosity, brittle mineral content, well trajectory is analyzed. Results show that the production logging result is consistent with the geology understanding, and fractures in the favorable layers make more gas contribution. Rate contribution shows positive correlation with TOC, the higher the TOC, the greater the rate contribution per stage. For wells with higher TOC, the rate contribution difference per stage is relatively smaller, but for wells with lower TOC, it shows huge rate contribution variation, fracture stages with TOC lower than 2% contribute very little, and there exist one or several dominant fractures which contributes most gas rate. Porosity and brittle minerals also show positive effect on rate contribution. The gas rate contribution per fracture stage increases with the increase of porosity and brittle minerals. The gas contribution of the front half lateral and that of latter half lateral are relatively close for the "upward" or horizontal wells. However, for the "downward" wells, the latter half lateral contribute much more gas than the front half lateral. It is believed that the liquid loading in the toe parts reduced the gas contribution in the front half lateral. The overview research is important to get a compressive understanding of production logging and different fractures’ contribution in shale gas production. It is also useful to guide the design of horizontal laterals and fractures scenarios design.


2016 ◽  
Vol 55 ◽  
pp. 61-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.R. Frank ◽  
S. Davies ◽  
S.T. Wagland ◽  
R. Villa ◽  
C. Trois ◽  
...  

Atmosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 1121
Author(s):  
Carlos J. Bucaram ◽  
Frank M. Bowman

Oil and gas production in the Bakken region increased dramatically during the past decade. A WRF-Chem modeling study of the Northern Great Plains was conducted for a July 2010 baseline scenario prior to the largest of these production increases. Simulations using the RACM-MADE/SORGAM, CBMZ-MOSAIC, and MOZART-MOSAIC chemistry-aerosol mechanisms were compared to each other and against ground level observations. All three gas-aerosol modules produced similar prediction results for O3, and NO2, with moderate correlation to hourly measurements and monthly average values overpredicted by 20% for O3 and underpredicted by 5% for NO2. Monthly average PM2.5 concentrations were relatively accurate, but correlation to hourly measurements was very low and PM2.5 subspecies exhibited high variability with a mix of over and underpredictions depending on the mechanism. Pollutant concentrations were relatively low across the mostly rural study domain, especially in the Bakken region. Results from this work can be used as a basis of comparison for studies of more recent time periods that include increased oil and gas-related emissions.


2011 ◽  
Vol 31 (5) ◽  
pp. 946-955 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charlotte Scheutz ◽  
Anders M. Fredenslund ◽  
Jonas Nedenskov ◽  
Jerker Samuelsson ◽  
Peter Kjeldsen

2015 ◽  
Vol 23 (02) ◽  
pp. 1550010 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. De Salve ◽  
D. Milani ◽  
B. Panella ◽  
G. Roveta

A prototype gas liquefaction plant has been designed and manufactured for Politecnico di Torino cryogenic laboratory and has been used for cryogenic applications like superconducting cables and low temperature refrigeration devices. The plant is able to liquefy nitrogen and, by means of little changes, hydrogen and other cryogenic fluids too. The thermal energy is removed by four high speed (up to 360 000 revolutions per minute) helium turbines that are connected in series. The gas liquefaction is carried out by the cooling condensation process of the gas flow that feeds a 0.15 m3 super insulated tank that is cooled inside. The cryogenic system is based on the Claude and Collins cycles, fed with helium that provides the cold sink. The paper shows the characteristics of the plant main components, and the time history of the measured temperatures, pressures, and flow rates during the plant start-up, as well as the steady state liquefied gas production rate. From the energetic point of view, the plant performance is acceptable for a research laboratory and the plant efficiency is not far from that of commercial larger size plants.


Author(s):  
Mohamed Gadalla ◽  
Nabil Al Aid

This paper studies the performance of a hybrid system that comprises a SOFC (Solid-Oxide-Fuel-Cell) combined with a PEMFC (polymer electrolyte membrane fuel Cell) which is integrated into a Gas Turbine power plant. Detailed modeling, thermodynamic, kinetic, geometric models are developed, implemented and validated for the synthesis/design and operational analysis of the combined hybrid system. In this system, the PEMFC makes use of the internal reforming ability of the SOFC to produce hydrogen which is necessary for the PEMFC operation. The heat released in the SOFC is utilized in the internal reforming process. Different levels of modeling for the SOFC, the PEMFC and the integrated system are presented. The overall system performance is analyzed by employing individual models and further applying thermodynamic laws for the entire cycle. The paper also introduces different methods of using shift reactors where CO reacts with H2O to produce CO2 and H2 to further increase the efficiency of the system by introducing a new factor to control parasitic energy consumption. In addition to this, the paper also suggests cooling the H2 stream before entering the PEMFC stack using the exhaust air of the Gas turbine. The main components of the SOFC+PEMFC system are a SOFC stack, shift reactors, selective oxidizer and a PEMFC stack. The fuel cells are connected in series for fuel feeding. Furthermore, although the efficiency of the SOFC increases with increasing operating pressures, the paper describes that the efficiency of the SOFC-PEMFC combination also varies with changing the temperatures. Energy and entropy balances are performed not only for the whole system but also for each component to evaluate the distribution of irreversibility and thermodynamic inefficiencies. According to the study, around 5% efficiency improvement was obtained with a parallel SOFC-PEMFC system as compared with a stand-alone SOFC. Alternative methods of improving the efficiencies are also introduced.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (11) ◽  
pp. 6273-6290 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinning Wang ◽  
Xingnan Ye ◽  
Jianmin Chen ◽  
Xiaofei Wang ◽  
Xin Yang ◽  
...  

Abstract. Hygroscopicity plays crucial roles in determining aerosol optical properties and aging processes in the atmosphere. We investigated submicron aerosol hygroscopicity and composition by connecting an aerosol time-of-flight mass spectrometer (ATOFMS) in series to a hygroscopic tandem differential mobility analyzer (HTDMA), to characterize hygroscopicity and composition of ambient aerosols in Shanghai, China. The HTDMA–ATOFMS data suggested that particle types, including biomass burning, elemental carbon (EC), dust/ash, organic particles, cooking particles and sea salt, were shown to have distinct hygroscopicity distributions. Peak intensities in particle spectra were found to be nonlinearly correlated with hygroscopicity, and the correlations were variant with particle types. Based on the measured hygroscopicity–composition relations, we developed a statistical method to estimate ambient particle hygroscopicity just from their mass spectra. The method was applied to another ambient ATOFMS dataset sampled from 12 to 28 September 2012 in Shanghai. The estimated hygroscopicity suggested that ambient particles were present in three apparent hygroscopicity modes, whose growth factors peaked at 1.05, 1.42 and 1.60 (85 % relative humidity, RH). The estimated growth factor (GF) were divided into four bins as <1.1, 1.1–1.3, 1.3–1.5 and >1.5 to represent the nearly hydrophobic (NH), less-hygroscopic (LH), more-hygroscopic (MH) and sea salt (SS) modes. Number contributions of particle types to hygroscopicity modes showed consistent results with the HTDMA–ATOFMS experiment. Based on the combined information on particle composition, hygroscopicity, air mass back trajectories and ambient pollutant concentrations, we inferred that the NH, LH, MH and SS modes were characterized by primary organic aerosol (POA) ∕ EC, secondary organic aerosol (SOA), secondary inorganic aerosol (SIA) and salt compositions, respectively. The proposed method would provide additional information to the study of particle mixing states, source identification and visibility variation.


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