DSpace at FH Burgenland logo
Log In
New user? Click here to register.Have you forgotten your password?
  1. Home
  2. HAW Burgenland
  3. Departments
  4. Energie & Umwelt
  5. Biogenic carbon-enriched and pollutant depleted SRF from commercial and pretreated heterogeneous waste generated by NIR sensor-based sorting
 
  • Details

Biogenic carbon-enriched and pollutant depleted SRF from commercial and pretreated heterogeneous waste generated by NIR sensor-based sorting

Publisher
Sage
Source
In: Waste Management & Research, 30(4), 381-391
Date Issued
2012
Author(s)
Pieber, Simone M. 
Ragossnig, Arne  
Pomberger Roland 
Curtis, Alexander 
DOI
10.1177/0734242X12437567
Abstract
Mechanical processing using predominantly particle size and density as separation criteria is currently applied in the production of solid-recovered fuel or refuse-derived fuel. It does not sufficiently allow for the optimization of the quality of heterogeneous solid waste for subsequent energy recovery. Material-specific processing, in contrast, allows the separation criterion to be linked to specific chemical constituents. Therefore, the technical applicability of material-specific sorting of heterogeneous waste, in order to optimize its routing options, was evaluated. Two sorting steps were tested on a pilot and a large scale. Near infrared multiplexed sensor-based sorting devices were used (1) to reduce the chlorine (Cl) respectively pollutant content, in order to broaden the utilization options of SRF in industrial co-incineration, and (2) to increase the biogenic carbon (Cbio) content, which is highly relevant in the light of the EU emission trading scheme on CO2. It was found that the technology is generally applicable for the heterogeneous waste fractions looked at, if the sensor systems are appropriately adjusted for the sorting task. The first sorting step allowed for the removal of up to 40% of the Cl freight by separating only 3 to 5% of the material mass. Very low Cl concentrations were achieved in the output stream to be used as solid-recovered fuel stream and additionally, the cadmium (Cd) and lead (Pb) concentration was decreased. A two- to four-fold enriched Cbio content was achieved by the second sorting step. Due to lower yields in the large-scale test further challenges need to be addressed.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11790/1419
Subjects
Solid recovered fuel
biogenic carbon
near infrared
sensor-based sorting
material-specific waste processing
pretreated waste
commercial solid waste
refuse-derived fuel
Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel

 

FHB is participating in:

Built with DSpace-CRIS software - Extension maintained and optimized by 4Science

  • Privacy policy
  • End User Agreement
  • Send Feedback

We collect and process your personal information for the following purposes: Authentication, Preferences, Acknowledgement and Statistics.
To learn more, please read our
privacy policy.

Customize