Mass, energy and material balances of SRF production process. Part 3: Solid recovered fuel produced from municipal solid waste

This is the third and final part of the three-part article written to describe the mass, energy and material balances of the solid recovered fuel production process produced from various types of waste streams through mechanical treatment. This article focused the production of solid recovered fuel from municipal solid waste. The stream of municipal solid waste used here as an input waste material to produce solid recovered fuel is energy waste collected from households of municipality. This article presents the mass, energy and material balances of the solid recovered fuel production process. These balances are based on the proximate as well as the ultimate analysis and the composition determination of various streams of material produced in a solid recovered fuel production plant. All the process streams are sampled and treated according to CEN standard methods for solid recovered fuel. The results of the mass balance of the solid recovered fuel production process showed that 72% of the input waste material was recovered in the form of solid recovered fuel; 2.6% as ferrous metal, 0.4% as non-ferrous metal, 11% was sorted as rejects material, 12% as fine faction and 2% as heavy fraction. The energy balance of the solid recovered fuel production process showed that 86% of the total input energy content of input waste material was recovered in the form of solid recovered fuel. The remaining percentage (14%) of the input energy was split into the streams of reject material, fine fraction and heavy fraction. The material balances of this process showed that mass fraction of paper and cardboard, plastic (soft) and wood recovered in the solid recovered fuel stream was 88%, 85% and 90%, respectively, of their input mass. A high mass fraction of rubber material, plastic (PVC-plastic) and inert (stone/rock and glass particles) was found in the reject material stream.

[1]  Costas A. Velis,et al.  Solid recovered fuel: materials flow analysis and fuel property development during the mechanical processing of biodried waste. , 2013, Environmental science & technology.

[2]  Mika Luoranen,et al.  Feasibility of energy recovery from municipal solid waste in an integrated municipal energy supply and waste management system , 2007, Waste management & research : the journal of the International Solid Wastes and Public Cleansing Association, ISWA.

[3]  Elena Cristina Rada,et al.  Selective collection as a pretreatment for indirect solid recovered fuel generation. , 2014, Waste management.

[4]  Kim Dam-Johansen,et al.  Co-firing straw and coal in a 150-MWe utility boiler: in situ measurements , 1998 .

[5]  Elena Cristina Rada,et al.  RDF/SRF: which perspective for its future in the EU. , 2012, Waste management.

[6]  F. Pinto,et al.  Gasification improvement of a poor quality solid recovered fuel (SRF). Effect of using natural minerals and biomass wastes blends , 2014 .

[7]  P. Vainikka,et al.  Mass, energy and material balances of SRF production process. Part 1: SRF produced from commercial and industrial waste. , 2014, Waste management.

[8]  Sònia Abelló,et al.  Volatilization characteristics of solid recovered fuels (SRFs) , 2013 .

[9]  P. Vainikka,et al.  Bromine as an ash forming element in a fluidised bed boiler combusting solid recovered fuel , 2011 .

[10]  Günter Scheffknecht,et al.  Ash fusibility and compositional data of solid recovered fuels , 2010 .

[11]  Costas Velis,et al.  Solid recovered fuel: influence of waste stream composition and processing on chlorine content and fuel quality. , 2012, Environmental science & technology.

[12]  Markku Hurme,et al.  Mass, energy and material balances of SRF production process. Part 2: SRF produced from construction and demolition waste. , 2014, Waste management.

[13]  Vera Susanne Rotter,et al.  Material flow analysis of RDF-production processes. , 2004, Waste management.

[14]  Umberto Arena,et al.  A waste management planning based on substance flow analysis , 2014 .

[15]  Nigel J. Simms,et al.  An integrated appraisal of energy recovery options in the United Kingdom using solid recovered fuel derived from municipal solid waste. , 2009, Waste management.

[16]  G. Scheffknecht,et al.  Drag coefficient of Solid Recovered Fuels (SRF) , 2010 .

[17]  E. C. Rada,et al.  RDF/SRF Evolution And MSW Bio-drying , 2012 .