Soild Waste Management Q and A
Soild Waste Management Q and A
Soild Waste Management Q and A
Exams Questions:-
1. Define life cycle assessment approach and the terms associated with product
life cycle, showing how this approach is meant to provide a useful framework
for manufacturers and consumers?
Life cycle assessment is an approach for assessing products, processes, industrial
systems and like. Begins with the gathering of the raw materials from the earth to
create the product and ends at the point when all materials are returned to the
earth. It evaluates all stages of product's life from the perspective that they are
interdependent, meaning that one operation leads to the next. Enables the
estimation of the cumulative environmental impacts resulting from all stages in
the product life cycle, and as a result allows selecting path or process that is more
environmentally preferable.
Terms associated with product life cycle:
a) Reusing: reusing a product saves energy and resources (plastic bags, glass
jars)
b) Remanufacturing: it is the process of resorting a product to like-new
condition, by disassembling the product, cleaning and refurbishing the
reusable parts, and stocking those parts in inventory.
c) Repair: it means replacing only the failed parts; while leaving the working
parts as they are.
d) Recycling: recovering materials from the waste stream and reprocessing
them so they become raw materials for new applications.
LCA provides a useful framework for manufacturers: who must choose
materials and technologies.
And for consumers: who want to include environmental considerations in their
choice of products.
2. What is meant by remanufacturing?
it is the process of resorting a product to like-new condition, by disassembling
the product, cleaning and refurbishing the reusable parts, and stocking those
parts in inventory.
3. Discuss briefly the different kinds of solid waste, and the main sources of
municipal solid waste. Define the following terms: waste generation, material
recover, trash?
Solid waste classifications:
a) Domestic waste: vegetable waste, kitchen waste, household.
b) Industrial waste: unused materials.
c) E-waste: discarded electronic devices like computers, TV, music systems
d) Construction waste: wood, stone.
e) Agriculture waste
f) Food processing waste: vegetables, meat.
g) Bio-medical waste: syringes, ….
h) Nuclear waste: unused materials from nuclear power plants.
The main sources of municipal solid waste are:
a) Residential
b) Commercial
c) Institutional
d) Industrial
Waste generation: the amount of materials and products that enter the waste stream.
Material recovery: the term used to cover the removal of materials from waste stream
for purpose of recycling and composting.
Trash: the combustible portion of rubbish.
Review Questions:-
1. What is meant by solid waste, MSW, garbage, rubbish?
- Solid waste: any material that we discard, that is not liquid or gas.
- MW (municipal solid waste): part of solid waste that does not include wastes
such as construction waste, automobile bodies, combustion ashes, industrial
waste. It consists mainly of paper, cardboard, plastic bottles, glass, tins and
cans, engine oil. (rubbish and garbage)
- Garbage: (food waste) is the animal and vegetable residue resulting from the
preparation, coking and serving of food. Largely organic matter and moisture.
- Rubbish: consists of old tin cans, newspaper, tires, packaging materials,
bottles, yard trimmings, plastic.
-
2. What is the environmental problems of open dumps?
a) Bad odors
b) Leachate
c) Scattered waste by wind
d) Toxic, smoke and greenhouse gases from burning of waste
3. What are the factors affecting waste generation?
a) Lifestyle
b) Urbanization
c) Income
SWM Part 2
Exams Questions:-
1. Give a reason:
A transfer station may be used as a part of SWM system: provides a link
between solid waste collection program and final waste disposal facility which
results in many benefits:
a) Fuel savings, reduction in road wear, and less air pollution due to fewer
vehicles being on the road
b) It reduces the cost of hauling waste to the regional landfill facility
c) It allows for screening, sorting and recycling waste
Waste segregated into degradable and non-degradable wastes: to recover non-
degradable wastes (electric items, plastics, tires, …) and degradable items (wood,
textiles, organic matter, …)
4. A residential compound having 8000 residential units as follows; 1600 villa; 800
residential block each of 4 storeys, 2 apartment per floor, and average of four
persons in each unit. Determine the total daily waste generated the number
and size of collection bins for villas and residential blocks, and the number and
size of the required trucks for collection and transportation processes (assume
any missing data).
Solution
Waste generation assumption:
• 1.4 kg/day/person
• Density = 300 kg/m³
Then the total daily waste generated will be
Each residential block will generate = 4*2*4*1.4 = 44.8 kg/day
The volume of generated waste = 44.8/300 = 0.15 m³
Each villa will generate = 4*1.4 = 5.6 kg/day
The volume of generated waste = 5.6/300 = 0.01867 m³
Every 10 residential blocks will have 2 bins, one for organic waste and the
other for any-other waste (3m³ each, underground storage type).
Waste transportation trucks
Three 8m³ rear loader trucks for the villas’ bins (1 for each type of waste as
stated before and 1 rotational shift).
Three 19 m³ crane trucks for the residential buildings underground bins (1 for
each type of waste as stated before, and 1 rotational shift).
Compression ratio 2:1
Review Questions:-
1. What is meant by solid waste management system and its components?
Solid waste management: the discipline associated with the control of
generation, storage, collection, transfer or transport, processing and disposal
of solid waste materials in a way that best addresses the range of public
health, conservation, economics, aesthetic, engineering and other
environmental considerations.
It consists of six components which are:
Waste generation: refers to activities either involved in identifying materials,
which are no longer usable and are gathered for systematic disposal or thrown
away.
Onsite handling, storage, and processing: are the activities at the point of
waste generation, which facilitate easier collection.
Waste collection: a crucial phase of waste management, includes activities
such as placing waste collection bins, collecting waste from those bins and
accumulating trash in the location where the collection vehicles are emptied.
Waste transfer and transport: are the activities involved in moving waste from
the local waste collection locations to the regional waste disposal site in large
waste transport vehicles.
Waste processing and recovery: refer to the facilities, equipment, and
techniques employed both to recover reusable or recyclable materials from the
waste stream and to improve the effectiveness of other functional elements of
waste management.
Disposal: is the final stage of waste management. It involves the activities
aimed at the systematic disposal of waste materials in locations such as
landfills or waste-to-energy facilities.
2. What is meant by ISWM and what are its three basic elements?
Integrated Solid Waste Management (ISWM): It refers to the selection and use
of appropriate management programs, technologies, and techniques to
achieve waste management goals and objectives.
a) Waste reduction or prevention: and consists of five elements
• Reduce toxicity
• Less packaging
• Product reuse
• More durable products
• On-site mulching and composting
b) Recycling: and consist of four elements
• Collection
• Processing
• Use of recycled materials in products
• Composting
c) Disposal: and consist of three elements
• Combustion with energy recovery
• Landfill
• Incineration without energy recovery
3. What is meant by waste minimization (reduction) and the concept of the
three Rs and the environmental impact of source reduction?
Waste reduction: the prevention of waste being created which is an
important method of waste management.
The modern concept of the three Rs: methods of avoidance include reuse of
second hand products to be refillable or reusable, repairing broken items
instead of buying new and so on.
a) Reduce
b) Reuse
c) Recycle
• Source reduction: in almost all circumstances is given the highest priority, it
involves reducing the amount and/or toxicity of the waste, it is the most
effective way to reduce the quantity of waste, costs and environmental
impacts. It may occur through the design, manufacture, or packaging of
products. It reduces the rate of consumption of scarce resources.
Effective if residents
follow rules i.e. must put
Effectiveness Very effective.
waste outside door
within restricted hours.
6. State four types of waste collection vehicles? And what are the factors to
be considered when deciding the truck size?
a) Rear loading compaction vehicles
b) Side loading compaction vehicles
c) Front loading compaction vehicles
d) Crane trucks
The factors to be considered when deciding the truck size:
a) Annual cost of owning and operating trucks
b) Cost of the crew that makes the pick-up
c) Type and density of collection points
d) Quantity of waste
e) Traffic levels
Recycling
Exams Questions:-
1. What is meant by recycling. State the benefits of recycling?
Recycling is the processing of a waste item into usable forms through using it as a
raw material for new products.
Benefits of recycling are:
a) Resource conservation
b) Pollution reduction
c) Reduces pressure on disposal systems
d) Making money out of waste
Review Questions:-
1. What is the difference between reuse and recycling?
• Reuse: elongation of the product life time.
• Recycling: elongation of material life time through using it as raw material
for other products.
2. What is meant by materials recovery facilities (MRF)? And what are the
functions of these facilities?
It is a facility that tries to recover recyclable materials that are mixed with all usual
municipal solid waste.
3. What are the main two types of plastic? Discuss briefly plastic recycling
processes?
Plastics can be categorized into:
a) Thermo plastics: represents 80% of plastics which can be re-melted and re-
molded into new products.
b) Thermo set plastics: represents 20% of plastics which decompose when they
are heated so they are difficult to recycle.
Plastic recycling processes depend on plastic waste type:-
1. Bags waste:
a) Agglomeration machine: cuts the plastic bags into small pieces.
b) Pelleting machine: convert the small pieces of plastic into small grains.
c) Film extruding machine: uses the small grains to make plastic bags.
d) Cutting machine: used to cut and weld the bags according to the required
size.
2. Hard plastic waste:
a) Crushing machine: crushes the hard plastic waste into small pieces.
b) At this stage plastic can take one of two ways:
• Hose extruding: uses hard small pieces to make hoses.
• Injection: uses the hard small pieces to make plastic products
according to the used mold.
3. Reject of the reject of plastic:
a) Agglomeration
b) Mixing the fine particles with sand
c) Furnace
d) Hydraulic pressing
e) Final product (sewer cover)
Composting
Exams Questions:-
1. What are the main factors affecting the composting process. Discuss in detail
each of these factors indicating the range of values?
The factors affecting composting process:
1. Temperature
• In the early stages of decomposition mesophilic microorganisms (bacteria
and fungi grow best at temperatures between 25 to 45 °C) generate
heat, while they metabolize (digest) the waste, which rises the
temperature of the pile.
• When temperatures reach 45 °C, the activity of mesophilic stops, and
thermophilic microorganisms which prefer temperatures between 45
and 75 °C take over the decomposition.
• As the nutrient supply drops, thermophilic die off, the temperature falls
and mesophilic microorganisms once again dominate the
decomposition process until stable end products are formed.
2. PH: in early stages of decomposition, organic acids are formed, which cause the
PH of the pile to drop to about 5.
When PH this low, acids tolerate fungi dominance.
Eventually microorganisms break down the organic acids and the pile PH rises.
3. Oxygen
• As aerobic microbes degrade waste, they remove oxygen from the pile.
• If the supply of oxygen is insufficient to meet their needs, anaerobic
microorganisms will take their place, slowing the degradation process
and producing undesirable odors.
• Oxygen can be supplied by:
Simply mixing or turning the pile every so often.
Piles can be aerated with forced ventilation.
4. Nutrient levels
• A number of nutrients must be available to the microorganisms that
attacking and degrading the compost pile.
• The most important nutrients needed are carbon for energy, nitrogen for
protein, and phosphorus and potassium for cell reproduction and
metabolism.
• One of the best indicators of the likely health of microorganisms is the
ratio of carbon to nitrogen available to them.
The ideal C: N ratio is roughly 25 to 35 parts of available carbon to
available nitrogen. High C: N ratios inhibit the growth of
microorganisms, slowing the decomposition. Low C: N ratios accelerate
the rate of decomposition.
• By properly combining different kinds of solid wastes, the C: N ratio can
be brought into the desirable range.
5. Moisture
Review Questions:-
1. What are the advantages of bio-fertilizer?
a) Environmentally responsible
• Keeps biodegradable waste out of landfills and sewage plants.
• Alternative to burning.
• Can be used in gardens instead of chemical fertilizers.
b) Saving money
c) Producing good conditioner for desert land
Waste to Energy
Exams Questions:-
1. What are the advantages and disadvantages of waste incineration?
Incineration advantages:
1) Efficient way to reduce the waste volume and demand for landfill space
2) Reducing the cost of waste transportation
3) Provide the best way to eliminate methane gas emissions from waste
management processes
4) Provides a substitute for fossil fuel combustion
Incineration disadvantages:
1) Heavy investments and high operating costs
2) Requires skilled staff
3) The residues from the flue gas cleaning can contaminate the environment if
not handled appropriately
4) Poorly operated incinerators release toxic substances such as dioxins into
the air
5) The ash recovered may be classified as hazardous materials that require
special handling
6) The public has generally been reluctant to accept the technology especially
if a facility is being proposed in their own area
3. What are the main characteristics of the rotary kiln used for waste
incineration?
• Rotate wastes in cylindrical container, enabling thorough mixing with
air
• Operating temperatures 800 – 1650 °C
• Has greatest resistance to high temperatures
• Can handle liquid, sludge, solid, or gases in large quantities
• Can operate in batch mode, allowing more flexibility than continuous
mode
• Can be mobile to allow onsite treatment
• Can accept entire drums of waste, a unique feature
Review Questions:-
1. State types of incinerators. Discuss briefly the characteristics of each type?
1) Grate system
2) Fluidized bed
3) Rotary kiln
4) Liquid injection
Fluidized bed
• Vessel contains inert granular material that expands and acts theoretically as a
fluid when gases are injected up through the material bed from nozzles
• Operating temperatures 750 – 1000 °C
• Can handle liquid, sludge, solid and gases
• Offers nearly isothermal operation
• Cannot handle waste that melts and slag that disrupting fluidization
Liquid injection
• Wastes are sent through nozzles and atomized into small droplets to allow for
the greatest possible mixing with air
• Operating temperatures 700 – 1600 °C
• Feed must act as liquid having a viscosity not exceeding certain limit
• Solids cause no problem if they can be melted and pumped
2. Give a reason: landfill should have daily cover, intermediate cover and final
cover?
• Daily cover: to reduce windblown litter and odor
• Intermediate cover:
a) To minimize water access
b) To provide fire protection
c) Mainly compacted soil
• Final cover:
a) To control water access
b) Reduce leachate generation
c) Provide final contour
d) Provide gas control
e) Allow plant growth
Review Questions:-
1. What are the factors affecting landfill design process?
1) Size and scale of the proposed landfill operation
2) Site location and characteristics
3) Surrounding environment
4) Type of waste to be deposited in the landfill
It should be sufficiently detailed to define how, where and when?