Waste to Energy Animation

Waste to Energy is a process that turns Solid Waste into Energy. The Originial technology used incineration in a process illustrated by this animation, but there are new technologies that are greener and more efficienct




WTE other than incincineration

[edit] Incineration

Incineration, the combustion of organic material such as waste, with energy recovery is the most common WtE implementation. Incineration may also be implemented without energy and materials recovery, however this is increasingly being banned in OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) countries.[citation needed] Furthermore, all new WtE plants in OECD countries must meet strict emission standards.[citation needed] Hence, modern incineration plants are vastly different from the old types, some of which neither recovered energy nor materials. Modern incinerators reduce the volume of the original waste by 95-96 %, depending upon composition and degree of recovery of materials such as metals from the ash for recycling.[2]
Concerns regarding the operation of incinerators include fine particulate, heavy metals, trace dioxin and acid gas emissions, even though these emissions are relatively low[3] from modern incinerators. Other concerns include toxic fly ash and incinerator bottom ash (IBA) management.[citation needed] Discussions regarding waste resource ethics include the opinion that incinerators destroy valuable resources and the fear that they may reduce the incentives for recycling and waste minimization activities.[citation needed] Incinerators have electric efficiencies on the order of 14-28%.[citation needed] The rest of the energy can be utilized for e.g. district heating, but is otherwise lost as waste heat.

[edit] WtE technologies other than incineration

There are a number of other new and emerging technologies that are able to produce energy from waste and other fuels without direct combustion. Many of these technologies have the potential to produce more electric power from the same amount of fuel than would be possible by direct combustion. This is mainly due to the separation of corrosive components (ash) from the converted fuel, thereby allowing a higher combustion temperatures in e.g. boilers, gas turbines, internal combustion engines, fuel cells. Some are able to efficiently convert the energy into liquid or gaseous fuels:
Thermal technologies:
Non-thermal technologies:
Mechanical biological treatment (MBT)

 
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