Potential application of pre-treated municipal solid waste incineration fly ash as cement supplement

Yakubu, Y; Zhou, J; Shu, Z; Zhang, Y; Wang, W; Mbululo, Y

HERO ID

4642822

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2018

Language

English

PMID

29594881

HERO ID 4642822
In Press No
Year 2018
Title Potential application of pre-treated municipal solid waste incineration fly ash as cement supplement
Authors Yakubu, Y; Zhou, J; Shu, Z; Zhang, Y; Wang, W; Mbululo, Y
Journal Environmental Science and Pollution Research
Volume 25
Issue 16
Page Numbers 16167-16176
Abstract Pre-treatment process carried out on raw municipal solid waste incineration (MSWI) fly ash (FA) sample that did not comply initially with the USEPA method 1311 toxicity characteristic leaching procedure (TCLP) regulatory limits of 2011 reduced its chloride and heavy metal content appreciably, thereby making it compliant with the aforementioned regulatory requirement. More than 98% of each heavy metal was successfully removed. The process was excellent in removing cadmium (Cd) (99.99%) and very good at removing the rest. About 99.96% of Cu was eliminated, 99.96% of cobalt (Co), 99.95% of Zn, 98.61% of Cr, and 98.12% of nickel (Ni). Also, the leachate resulting from these pre-treatment steps met the China (GB 16889-2008) and USEPA method 1311 regulatory standards for safe discharge. The density and compressive strength of all the samples prepared increased as the FA content decreased. The compressive strength of all the samples passed the 1989 USEPA-recommended value of 0.34 MPa (50 psi), thereby making them suitable for industrial application. The sample that attained the highest compressive strength (2.08 MPa) after 28 days of curing incorporated 55% fly ash (FACS55), while the one with the least compressive strength (0.65 MPa) after the same period was made from only fly ash (FACS100). Moreover, the concentration of heavy metals in all the samples generally decreased with the FA content. Chromium was not detected in all the samples, thereby making this an excellent method for its immobilization. From the leachability test results, all the samples prepared met the USEPA method 1311 TCLP regulatory limits.
Doi 10.1007/s11356-018-1851-3
Pmid 29594881
Wosid WOS:000434051300079
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English