Evaluation of Sewage Sludge Co-incineration in the Existing Heating Plant or Power Plant from Emission Production Point of View

Sewage sludge from wastewater treatment consists of inorganic elements (eg. nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, calcium and magnesium) and organic elements. Up-to-date technologies allow a number of ways of sewage sludge treatment. Inorganic elements are good fertilizers and organic elements are used f...

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Main Authors: L. Fryba, L. Bebar, M. Tous
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIDIC Servizi S.r.l. 2013-09-01
Series:Chemical Engineering Transactions
Online Access:https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/6086
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spelling doaj-5de4434441ac4f3899d37963da88a0192021-02-21T21:04:08ZengAIDIC Servizi S.r.l.Chemical Engineering Transactions2283-92162013-09-013510.3303/CET1335137Evaluation of Sewage Sludge Co-incineration in the Existing Heating Plant or Power Plant from Emission Production Point of ViewL. FrybaL. BebarM. TousSewage sludge from wastewater treatment consists of inorganic elements (eg. nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, calcium and magnesium) and organic elements. Up-to-date technologies allow a number of ways of sewage sludge treatment. Inorganic elements are good fertilizers and organic elements are used for regeneration of land – these are excellent features for fertilizing. But sewage sludge also contains large amounts of pollutants (e.g. heavy metals) which can contaminate agricultural land. This is the reason, why utilization for agricultural purposes is not allowed in several European countries and therefore other methods are preferred. These are landfilling, energy recovery (incineration, anaerobic digestion, pyrolysis, etc.) or mechanical and biological modifications to minimize the environmental impact. Incineration is an advantageous way of energy recovery. This process utilizes calorific value of sewage sludge and also minimizes the environmental impact. There are more options – incineration in new incineration units specialized on sewage sludge or co-incineration with another primary fuel (e.g. co-incineration with coal in heating or power plants). The objective of the paper is to create models (new sewage sludge incinerator and coal-fired power plant, where is incineration sludge with coal) to detection amount of emissions. Emissions are compared with European emission limits for waste incineration plants. The goal of the research is evaluation of the two mentioned ways of sewage sludge incineration from emission production point of view. Results are then compared with European limits on emissions from waste-to-energy plants. Further, modifications in flue gas cleaning system are proposed to meet the limits and costs on these modifications are performed.https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/6086
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author L. Fryba
L. Bebar
M. Tous
spellingShingle L. Fryba
L. Bebar
M. Tous
Evaluation of Sewage Sludge Co-incineration in the Existing Heating Plant or Power Plant from Emission Production Point of View
Chemical Engineering Transactions
author_facet L. Fryba
L. Bebar
M. Tous
author_sort L. Fryba
title Evaluation of Sewage Sludge Co-incineration in the Existing Heating Plant or Power Plant from Emission Production Point of View
title_short Evaluation of Sewage Sludge Co-incineration in the Existing Heating Plant or Power Plant from Emission Production Point of View
title_full Evaluation of Sewage Sludge Co-incineration in the Existing Heating Plant or Power Plant from Emission Production Point of View
title_fullStr Evaluation of Sewage Sludge Co-incineration in the Existing Heating Plant or Power Plant from Emission Production Point of View
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of Sewage Sludge Co-incineration in the Existing Heating Plant or Power Plant from Emission Production Point of View
title_sort evaluation of sewage sludge co-incineration in the existing heating plant or power plant from emission production point of view
publisher AIDIC Servizi S.r.l.
series Chemical Engineering Transactions
issn 2283-9216
publishDate 2013-09-01
description Sewage sludge from wastewater treatment consists of inorganic elements (eg. nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, calcium and magnesium) and organic elements. Up-to-date technologies allow a number of ways of sewage sludge treatment. Inorganic elements are good fertilizers and organic elements are used for regeneration of land – these are excellent features for fertilizing. But sewage sludge also contains large amounts of pollutants (e.g. heavy metals) which can contaminate agricultural land. This is the reason, why utilization for agricultural purposes is not allowed in several European countries and therefore other methods are preferred. These are landfilling, energy recovery (incineration, anaerobic digestion, pyrolysis, etc.) or mechanical and biological modifications to minimize the environmental impact. Incineration is an advantageous way of energy recovery. This process utilizes calorific value of sewage sludge and also minimizes the environmental impact. There are more options – incineration in new incineration units specialized on sewage sludge or co-incineration with another primary fuel (e.g. co-incineration with coal in heating or power plants). The objective of the paper is to create models (new sewage sludge incinerator and coal-fired power plant, where is incineration sludge with coal) to detection amount of emissions. Emissions are compared with European emission limits for waste incineration plants. The goal of the research is evaluation of the two mentioned ways of sewage sludge incineration from emission production point of view. Results are then compared with European limits on emissions from waste-to-energy plants. Further, modifications in flue gas cleaning system are proposed to meet the limits and costs on these modifications are performed.
url https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/6086
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AT lbebar evaluationofsewagesludgecoincinerationintheexistingheatingplantorpowerplantfromemissionproductionpointofview
AT mtous evaluationofsewagesludgecoincinerationintheexistingheatingplantorpowerplantfromemissionproductionpointofview
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