Experimental Investigation on the Properties of Street and Sidewalk Cleaning Waste
-
Published:2023-12-01
Issue:4
Volume:16
Page:149-153
-
ISSN:2720-6947
-
Container-title:Architecture, Civil Engineering, Environment
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:
Affiliation:
1. PhD ; John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin , Faculty of Natural and Technical Science , Konstantynów 1 H , Lublin , Poland
Abstract
Abstract
One of the municipal waste streams is street cleaning waste, classified under code 20 03 03. They are not considered hazardous waste. Due to the lack of other management technology, they are sent to landfills. This waste, among other things, by its high chloride content especially after winter, can contribute to changes in the salinity of surface and groundwater and soil salinization, which consequently contributes to changes in the local environment and entire ecosystems. As it is deposited entirely in landfills, it also contributes to the salinity of leachate generated here. The Regulation of the Minister of Economy of July 16, 2015, on allowing waste to be deposited in landfills, the total organic carbon in waste deposited in non-hazardous and inert waste landfills must not exceed 5% of dry weight. The purpose of this article is to present a study of the quality of the waste on parameters like water content, organic and mineral fraction in the dry weight of the waste, and fractional separation. The water content of the waste ranged from 12–27%, while the mineral fraction in the dry weight was 91–94%. The smallest fraction below 0.05 mm accounted for 0d 1.8 to 4.5%.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Reference34 articles.
1. Law on Waste dated December 12, 2014, as amended. (Journal of Laws of 2013, item 21, as amended). 2. Regulation of the Minister of Economy dated July 16, 2015, on allowing waste to be stored in landfills (Dz.U. 2015 item 1277) 3. Alwaeli, M., Gołaszewski, J., Niesler, M., Pizoń, J., Gołaszewskam. (2020). Recycle option for metallurgical sludge waste as a partial replacement for natural sand in mortars containing CSA cement to save the environment and natural resources, J. Hazard. Mater. 3985, 123101. 4. Alves, C.A., Evtyugina, M., Vicente, A.M.P., Vicente E.D., Nunes T.V., Silva P.M.A., Duarte M.A.C., Pio C.A., Amato F., Querol, X. (2018). Chemical profiling of PM10 from urban road dust. Sci. Total Environ. 634, 41–51. 5. Amato, F., Karanasiou, A., Cordoba, P., Alastuey, A., Moreno, T., Lucarelli, F., Nava S., Calzolai G., Querol X. (2014). Effects of Road Dust Suppressants on PM Levels in a Mediterranean Urban Area. Environ. Sci. Technol. 48(14), 8069–8077.
|
|