This document is about waste to energy and presents information in 15 sections. It discusses how waste is currently managed and introduces waste to energy as a process to convert non-recyclable waste into usable forms of energy. Waste to energy plants gasify, pyrolyze, or incinerate waste to produce heat, fuels, or electricity. The benefits of waste to energy include reducing waste volume and producing renewable energy.
This document is about waste to energy and presents information in 15 sections. It discusses how waste is currently managed and introduces waste to energy as a process to convert non-recyclable waste into usable forms of energy. Waste to energy plants gasify, pyrolyze, or incinerate waste to produce heat, fuels, or electricity. The benefits of waste to energy include reducing waste volume and producing renewable energy.
This document is about waste to energy and presents information in 15 sections. It discusses how waste is currently managed and introduces waste to energy as a process to convert non-recyclable waste into usable forms of energy. Waste to energy plants gasify, pyrolyze, or incinerate waste to produce heat, fuels, or electricity. The benefits of waste to energy include reducing waste volume and producing renewable energy.
1 Supervised by: Presented by Dr. Kazi A. B. M. Mohiuddin MD. Jakir Hasan Asha(1401022) Professor Dipto Dakua (1401039) Department of Civil Engineering Section: A Third year Second term Department of Civil Engineering, KUET 2 In our daily life we do make waste and waste…………….
The amount is increasing……………
3 But have you ever think where our wastes go ????
Do really our wastes go there????
Of course not ……………… 4 5 In waste management there are several methods..... 6 7 Process……… 8 In USA……… 9 In Denmark……… 10 How they do it ……… 11 How they do it ……… WTE Plant : Waste to Energy (WTE), is a term that is used to describe various technologies that convert non- recyclable waste into usable forms of energy including heat, fuels and electricity. WTE can occur through a number of processes such as incineration, gasification, pyrolysis, anaerobic digestion, and landfill gas recovery 12 There are a lot of benefits when using waste-to-energy References……… 13 Waste-to-energy: A review of the status and benefits in USA C.S. Psomopoulos , A. Bourka , N.J. Themelis Municipal solid waste fueled power generation in china: A case study of waste-to-energy in changchun city . Hefacheng , Yanguozhang, Aihongmeng, Qinghaii. Energy Answers Co., SEMASS Resource Recovery Facility, Technology, Description Performance History. <http://www.energyanswers.com/pdf/SEMASS%20Tech% 20Desc%20and%20Perf%20History.2008.WEB.pdf>. Thipse, S. S.; Sheng, C.; Booty, M. R.; Magee, R. S.; Dreizin, E. L. Synthetic fuel for imitation of municipal solid waste in experimental studies of waste incineration. Chemosphere 2001, 44, 1071-1077 Zhang, Y.; Yao, Z.; Lv, J.; Guo, L. A Method and Equipment for Solid Waste Combustion. Chinese Patent CN1224134, July 28, 1999 Zhang, Y.; Guo, L.; Li, Q.; Wu, Z.; Wang, Z. A Feeder and Dryer for Solid Waste Furnace. Chinese Patent CN2462251, Nov 28, 2001. 14