| Literature DB >> 35424531 |
Dan Chen1, Yingying Zhang1, Yao Xu2, Qing Nie3, Zhanbin Yang3, Wenyu Sheng1, Guangren Qian1.
Abstract
Focusing on the great potential of municipal solid waste incineration (MSWI) residues in the construction sector, the applications of recycling MSWI residues in construction materials are discussed in this review. Incineration is a promising method for managing the great quantity of municipal solid waste (MSW). Careful handling of incineration residues including fly ash, air pollution control (APC) residues, and bottom ash is required for this approach. The yield of these residues is large, and they contain many toxic and harmful substances. On the other hand, these residues contain valuable components such as SiO2, CaO, Al2O3, MgO, which are important components of building materials. Therefore, MSWI residues present huge opportunities for potential recycling and reuse in the construction and building industry. This paper summarized and discussed the application of MSWI residues in four typical building materials including cast stone, glass-ceramic, cement, and concrete. Before utilization, three types of pretreatment methods can be used to reduce the toxicity of the residues and improve the performance of the products. In addition, the current issues and the prospects of this field, and the environmental impacts of this application were discussed. It was concluded that MSWI residues can be used to prepare building materials after proper treatment which can improve the mechanical and chemical properties of the residues. The recycling can gain significant economic and environmental benefits at the same time. However, further researches on treatment methods for fine particles are needed. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35424531 PMCID: PMC8981596 DOI: 10.1039/d1ra08050d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Prominent application of MSWI residues in different countries worldwide[7–9]
| Continent | Country | Application ways of MSWI residues |
|---|---|---|
| Europe | United Kingdom | Road construction, structural platforms |
| Sweden | Road construction, landfill cover | |
| Netherlands | Construction material | |
| Italy | Road construction, cement | |
| German | Road base | |
| Denmark | Subbase layer | |
| Belgium | Construction material | |
| Poland | Road construction | |
| Spain | Embankments, road subbase, cement and concrete | |
| Czech Republic | Soil surface | |
| France | Road construction | |
| Norway | Landfill construction | |
| Asia | China | Road construction |
| Japan | Cement clinker |
Fig. 1The four main application categories of MSWI residues.
Examples of chemical compositions of MSWI residues (wt%)[17,30]
| Residues | CaO | SO3 | SiO2 | MgO | Al2O3 | Cl | Na2O | P2O5 | LOI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MSWI fly ash | 41.8 | 4.2 | 3.1 | 1.7 | 1.2 | 16.6 | 7.3 | 0.4 | 17.6 |
| MSWI APC residue | 49.1 | — | 2.4 | 1.2 | 1.4 | 14.8 | — | 0.12 | 29.6 |
| MSWI bottom ash | 14.3 | 0.3 | 53.8 | 1.9 | 8.7 | 0.6 | 11.7 | 1.7 | 0.7 |
Cl stands for chloride.
LOI stands for loss on ignition.
Fig. 2Treatment methods of MSWI residues.
Comparison of three categories of treatment methods for MSWI residues[32,33]
| Category | Specific methods | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Separation | Water washing | Simple | Secondary pollution possible increase leaching of heavy metals |
| High dioxins degradation | |||
| High soluble salts removal | |||
| Wet grinding | Simple | Secondary pollution | |
| No additional chemicals | |||
| Electrodialysis | Good heavy metals removal efficiency | High technical requirement | |
| High cost | |||
| Secondary pollution | |||
| Solidification/stabilization | Chemical stabilization | No secondary pollutant | Unable to destruct organic pollutants |
| Carbonation | Utilizing CO2 from stack gas | Not very fast | |
| Reducing off-gas emission | |||
| Carbon sequestration | |||
| Cement stabilization | Stabilizing heavy metals | Unable to destruct organic pollutants | |
| Low technical requirement | |||
| Low cost | |||
| Thermal treatment | Vitrification | High removal efficiency of chlorine and organics | High energy consumption |
| Melting | High cost | ||
| Sintering | Formation of low volatilization of oxides or alumina/silicates |
Fig. 3Design process for preparation of cast stone from MSWI residues.
Fig. 4Process of using MSWI residues to prepare glass-ceramic by sintering method.
Fig. 5Process flow of preparation of Portland cement from MSWI residues.
Fig. 6Process of concrete preparation using the MSWI residues.
Characteristics of recycling MSWI residues for building materials[34]
| Building material | Type of MSWI residues | Pretreatment | Role of MSWI residues | Waste generation | Leaching | Benefits | Challenges |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cast stone | Fly ash, bottom ash, mixture | Not required | Raw material | None | Low | Good performance | High treatment temperature |
| Glass-ceramic | Fly ash, bottom ash, mixture | Not required | Raw material | None | Low/medium | Natural resources protection | Possible leaching |
| Economic viability | |||||||
| Cement | Fly ash, bottom ash, mixture | Advised | Partial substitute for raw materials | Off-gas | Low | Easy to implement | Possible leaching |
| CO2 emission reduction | |||||||
| Concrete | Fly ash, bottom ash | Advised | Substitute for cement or aggregate | Off-gas | Low | Resource conservation | Possible leaching |
| Early cracking in structured concrete | |||||||
| Chemical corrosion of product |
Inference results derived from the preparation of cast stone from metallurgical waste slag.
Fig. 7Materials and energy flowing into and out of the system during the preparation of building materials with MSWI residues.