Incinerators.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 17 Environmental Biotechnology People need a good environment to be healthy and happy. The average person in the U.S. creates 4.3 pounds of solid.
Advertisements

Solid Domestic Waste IB Syllabus 5.5.1, AP Syllabus Ch 21 Personal Waste Audit Trashed video.
Solid Waste Management
Miss Nelson SCIENCE ~ CHAPTER 12 ENERGY AND MATERIAL RESOURCES.
Solid Waste Management Ahmed A.M. Abu Foul Environmental Department Islamic University of Gaza.
ERT 319 Industrial Waste Treatment Semester /2013 Huzairy Hassan School of Bioprocess Engineering UniMAP.
Solid Waste and Recycling
APES – Mrs. Soja – Part 1. A.Solid Waste - any unwanted material that is solid  1.The U.S. produces 11,000,000,000 tons per year (4.3 pounds per day)
 Phoenix Pacific Balboa Pacific Corporation Waste Management & Power Generation Technology Waste Management & Power Generation Technology.
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
Solid Waste are useless, unwanted or hazardous materials resulting from human activities Rubbish that may decompose e.g. food materials Non-decomposable.
 In one year there is enough waste produced in the United States to fill garbage cans that would stretch from the Earth to the moon. –Jennifer Carless,
 Energy from Waste Mass burn technologies operating at extremely high temperatures Initially - no filtration for hazardous air emissions No federal or.
Solid Waste. Trash Facts  The average person produces about 2 kilograms of trash daily.  Every hour, people throw away 2.5 million plastic bottles.
Solid Waste & Recycling By: Shannon Reece.
Using Natural ResourcesSection 3 Section 3: Pollution and Recycling Preview Key Ideas Bellringer What Causes Pollution? Air Pollution Major Air Pollutants.
Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright
Waste Chapter 19.
Waste.
Environmental Science. This is our independent variable: presence of a liner These items will be studied in relation to our IV: paper, sun chip bag, chip.
Due to global warming, ice sheets are melting quickly in both poles. It is expected the rise of sea level in a near future.
Environmental Chemistry Chapter 16: Wastes, Soils, and Sediments Copyright © 2012 by DBS.
Chapter 18 The Disposable Decades - 50s-90s 1. Disposable Life Style - Use once and throw away 2. Convenience became necessity 3. Results – some areas.
War on Waste SC.912.L Waste management strategies Recycling and reuse- Recycling allows the reuse of glass, plastics, paper, metals, and other.
WASTE... By Amanda Buckley. What is Waste Management?  Waste management is the collection, transport, processing, recycling or disposal and monitoring.
How Do People Affect the Environment? Pollution- a harmful change to the natural environment Why does pollution occur? Earth’s land, water and air can.
Solid Waste.
D18 Explain the short-and long-term impacts of landfills and incineration of waste materials on the quality of the environment.
Garbage. We throw away… Enough aluminum to rebuild the country’s commercial airline fleet every 3 months Enough tires each year to encircle the planet.
THE GEOGRAPHY OF POLLUTION. GROUNDING INDUSTRY AND POLLUTION As a country develops, it industrializes, and industrial waste products are major polluters.
5.1 Nature of pollution. Pollution The contamination of air, water, or soil by substances that are harmful to living organisms. Pollution can occur naturally,(ex.
Using Natural Resources Organisms and Their Environment Energy and Resources Pollution and Recycling.
Integrated Solid Waste Management ENVM 649: Principles of Waste Management and Pollution Control Dr. Robert Beauchamp.
Municiple Solid Wastes MSW = Pollution or Resource? Pollution is the contamination of air, water, or soil with undesirable amounts of material or heat.
Where Does the Trash Go? Unit 5 - Big Idea Technology, by itself, is neither good nor bad, but decisions about the use of products and systems can result.
Waste. Solid Waste Any discarded solid material The U.S. produces 10 billion metric tons of solid waste each year. The amount of waste generated by each.
Chapter 4 Land and Soil Resources
Section 8.5—Environmental Chemistry What other considerations do companies need to think about?
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
Land, Water, and Air Resources Chapter 4
POLLUTION MANAGEMENT 5.5 Solid domestic waste. Assessment Statements  Outline the types of solid domestic waste.  Describe and evaluate.
Chapter 12 Notes #2. A landfill is a waste disposal facility where wastes are put in the ground and covered each day with dirt, plastic, or both. 50%
. Integrated Science C Mrs. Brostrom.  Objective: Explain short term and long term impacts of landfills and incineration of waste materials on the quality.
What is done with Waste/Trash?. Solid Waste: Generation of Waste.
5.5 Solid Domestic Waste (SDW). Sources of SDW Solid domestic waste is garbage or trash which has no value to the producer USA = 3.5 kg SDW per day EU.
Environmental Science CH. 24 Notes Solid and Hazardous Wastes.
A natural and renewable resource
Conserving Resources 8 th Grade Science Book Chapter 14.
..  Objectives Explain short term and long term impacts of landfills and incineration of waste materials on the quality of the environment. Explain how.
II. Humans Alter the Biosphere. A. Land and Water Pollution 1) Agriculture (man-made monocultures) that must be maintained by a high energy input in fertilizers,
Dealing with waste Part II - Incinerators. D18 Explain the short- and long-term impacts of landfills and incineration of waste materials on the quality.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Prentice Hall, Inc.. From Landfill to School.
WILL THE WINNERS LOSE? Landfill Test Review. Objective: Be the team with the most points. When your team answers a question correctly, you can choose.
What is sustainability? Define sustainability. Draw the 3 circles of sustainability.
Impacts of Landfills Ecological, Environmental and Urban Effects.
Module 53 Landfills and Incineration
Land Pollution Solid Waste.
Chapter 20: Our Impact on Land
Common method of solid waste disposal.
Ch.27 Conserving Resources
Lecture (5): Waste treatment and disposal
Landfill Review.
OA2.1 Understand energy and its conservation
Types of Waste Hazardous: can be liquid, solid, gaseous
What is incineration? A controlled process in which mixed garbage is burned at very high temperatures Reduces volume of trash by up to 90% Metals removed.
5.1 Nature of pollution.
Environmental Geotechnics
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES
Presentation transcript:

Incinerators

D18 Explain the short- and long-term impacts of landfills and incineration of waste materials on the quality of the environment.

Learning Targets I can explain how an incinerator works. I can explain the short-term environmental effects of an incinerator. I can explain the long-term environmental effects of an incinerator.

What is an incinerator? A building designed to burn solid waste at extremely high temperatures (as high as 2000° C) Accounts for 14% of US waste disposal The burning of refuse drastically reduces the volume of the solid waste.

Incinerator Process

How does an incinerator make energy? The heat generated by the process is captured to create steam to turn turbines to produce electricity.

How a Waste-to-energy plant works Video Clip

How Much MSW can be Incinerated? Virtually all of the contents of the municipal solid waste stream are combustible at the high temperature Examples of combustible material include paper, food, yard waste, plastic, rubber, and wood. Non-combustible materials in the waste stream include glass, metals, ceramics, and clay.

Problems with Incinerators Makes landfills more toxic Use the ash as the daily cover layer Air Pollution Lack of monitoring Toxic metals (mercury, arsenic, lead, cadmium, etc.) Acid Gases (Hydrogen Fluoride, Hydrochloric Acid, Sulfuric Acid) Particulate matter – health effects Nitrogen Oxides (NOx), Sulfur Oxides (SOx)

Problems with Incinerators Destroys materials instead of recycling Global warming contribution worse than zero waste solutions Makes the problem "invisible" rather than making it very visible Very costly to build (up to $200 million)

Benefits of Incinerators Ash has virtually no groundwater contamination risk if landfill is properly designed Smaller amount of land needed Does not have to be capped off They can be used continuously Dumping in landfills is becoming expensive which makes incinerators more cost-effective Possible solution to the nation’s energy needs

Benefits of Incinerators Reduces the amount of waste that must be landfilled Allows us to use the non-recyclable trash

Learning Target Checkpoint How does an incinerator work? What are the short-term environmental effects of an incinerator? What are the long-term environmental effects of an incinerator?