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For managing municipal solid waste (MSW), there are two different treatment methods established: thermal recovery in waste incineration (MSWI) and mechanical-biological treatment (MBT). Both generate valuable fractions and treatment residues. In the case of valuable fractions, high-calorific material from MBT is used in MSWI. Therefore, the methods are connected at the . However, there are differences in handling the treatment residues. Although the processing of MSWI slags for the recovery of metals and, to some extent, glass is already an established practice in countries like Austria, Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands and Denmark, only a portion of these residues is landfilled. In contrast, MBT rotting residues are exclusively landfilled to date. This work addresses the development of a mechanical pre-treatment process aimed at separating a partial stream from MBT rotting residues. The resulting material was subsequently evaluated for its suitability for treatment using established MSWI slag processing technologies. The experiments demonstrated that this partial stream can be integrated into existing MSWI slag processing systems, enabling the recovery of metals (1 wt-%), glass (7.9 wt-%) and ceramics/stone (4.3 wt-%). In addition, a high-calorific refuse-derived fuel-feedstock comprising 5 wt-% was generated. The largest portion, accounting for 65.3 wt-%, consists of organic material that is currently being investigated as a potential feedstock for pyrolysis applications. The results show that appropriate pre-treatment can reintegrate 28.4 wt-% of the MBT rotting residues to the material cycle using existing infrastructure. This represents a connection between MSWI and MBT at for the first time.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0734242X251352808 | DOI Listing |
Waste Manag Res
July 2025
Chair of Waste Processing Technology and Waste Management, Montanuniversitaet Leoben, Leoben, Austria.
For managing municipal solid waste (MSW), there are two different treatment methods established: thermal recovery in waste incineration (MSWI) and mechanical-biological treatment (MBT). Both generate valuable fractions and treatment residues. In the case of valuable fractions, high-calorific material from MBT is used in MSWI.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWaste Manag
December 2014
Institute of Waste Management, Department of Water-Atmosphere-Environment, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Muthgasse 107, 1190 Vienna, Austria. Electronic address:
An inverse dispersion technique in conjunction with Open-Path Tunable-Diode-Laser-Spectroscopy (OP-TDLS) and meteorological measurements was applied to characterise methane (CH4) emissions from an Austrian open-windrow composting plant treating source-separated biowaste. Within the measurement campaigns from July to September 2012 different operating conditions (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWaste Manag Res
February 2008
Compost - Consulting & Development, Perchtoldsdorf, Austria.
In order to carry out life-cycle assessments as a basis for far-reaching decisions about environmentally sustainable waste treatment, it is important that the input data be reliable and sound. A comparison of the potential greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with each solid waste treatment option is essential. This paper addresses GHG emissions from controlled composting processes.
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