January-February 2009

A Convergence of Wastestreams

The keys to efficient transfer station operations

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Photo:@iStockphoto.com/gioadventures

By Daniel P. Duffy

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It sounds simple enough. Collected waste is hauled to a centrally located facility, called a transfer station, instead of being taken directly to a landfill. At the transfer station, the waste from multiple collection routes gets deposited on a tipping floor, where front-end loaders and other equipment push it into large, open-topped transfer trailers parked and waiting in a bay below.

The aim is basic to any successful business: save money. Consolidating larger amounts of waste into fewer transport platforms achieves economies of scale that reduce overall transportation costs. Measured in cost per ton-mile, it is far cheaper to move waste in larger semi-trailers designed for long-distance hauling than in multiple waste-collection trucks designed to gather and compact waste at pickup points along a relatively short collection route. The former requires less labor (fewer drivers), less maintenance (fewer and simpler vehicles requires less extensive maintenance), and a more efficient power plant (utilizing fewer gallons of diesel per mile when loaded).

However, the devil is always in the details. Creating a work space where the waste from multiple collection trucks can be consolidated and transferred to fewer, larger transport trucks involves more than just pouring the concrete for a tipping floor and pushing the waste into the transport truck with a front-end loader. The waste material has to be prepared for shipping and accurately weighed; loading and offloading waste has to be done in the most efficient manner possible; communication with the hauling trucks has to be continuous to ensure timely routing and dispatching; access and exit movements by trucks have to be properly choreographed to ensure steady material flows.

Why Transfer Stations?
It is too often forgotten that companies—even waste management companies—are in business to make money. It is inherently inefficient (that is, expensive) in term of dollars per ton of waste times the mileage traveled to the haul waste long distances in relatively small waste-collection trucks. The trucks that pull up to your curb once a week and pick up your household waste are not designed for long-haul transport. They are designed to efficiently gather and compact relatively large quantities of loose waste and then haul it the comparatively short distance to the local landfill.

Transfer stations are relatively compact structures consisting of a few basic structural elements. Entrance to the facility is via an access roadway or ramp that directs truck traffic to the open bay(s) of the transfer station. These bays typically consist of reinforced concrete floors enclosed by prefabricated metal building structures. The floors are not reinforced with steel rebar only. Further protection from the impacts of dropping and pushing waste and the movement of heavy equipment is often provided by steel rails set in the surface of the concrete floors. These rails are oriented in the direction of waste movement (towards the lower bay) and extend slightly above the concrete surface.

Depositing waste from collection trucks and loading waste into transfer trucks both occur on the transfer station’s tipping floor. Adjacent to and below the tipping floor is the receiving bay. This is a recessed ramp long enough to contain at least one transfer truck and deep enough so that the surface of the tipping floor is somewhat higher than the top of the truck’s trailer. Safety rails and guide bars are used to direct personnel and workflow. The preferred method of moving deposited waste from the tipping floor to the trucks is the front-end loader.

Loading and Offloading
This front-end loader is the workhorse of the transfer station. Unlike its tracked cousin operating at the working face of a landfill, the front-end loaders utilized by transfer stations are equipped with wheels to prevent damage to the concrete surface of the tipping floor. Equipped with an oversized bucket originally designed to scoop up and lift large quantities of relatively low-density materials, the front-end loader can be easily modified for operations in a transfer station. The first modification would be to replace the standard bucket with a specially designed refuse bucket. The refuse bucket has an additional spill plate welded onto the back of the bucket to protect the operator from being struck by spillage.

This is especially important since waste is very heterogeneous, both in material characteristics and object sizes. Often, parts of the waste material are so light and low-density that they can easily fall off or even get blown off the heaped pile of waste being pushed by the bucket. Airborne parts and materials can cause serious damage to the front-end loader’s drive train by clogging air intakes and covering up the radiator, causing he engine to overheat. In addition to protecting the driver and the cooling system, wheeled front-end loaders are also equipped with strike bars that prevent waste from wrapping around the axles.

Material Preparation
Some material preparation occurs in the waste-collection trucks themselves as they compact their loads during pickup and delivery. On average (with wide variations, however) waste at the curbside has an average density of 0.10 to 0.17 tons per cubic yard (approximately 7–12 pounds per cubic foot). Compactors inside the waste-collection trucks reduce the volume of waste by about 50%, effectively doubling the density of the waste to approximately 0.20 to 0.35 tons per cubic yard (roughly 15–25 pounds per cubic foot). Additional compaction is rarely done at transfer stations that utilize truck transport. However, baling operations that compact and bundle waste into tight “bricks” are often performed at rail transfer stations. The loads of compacted waste are lifted via a fixed crane into the open top of the train’s freight cars.

Weighing
Waste loads are weighed by having the waste-collection trucks drive over truck scales installed at the transfer station. In-ground scales can be installed in recessed pits or else directly on flat ground. In the first case, the elevation of the surface of the scale is flushed with the adjacent pavement. In the second case, the scale’s surface is somewhat higher than the pavement and can be accessed by means of approach ramps.

The weight of the truckload is measured by a series of load cells attached to strategic points on the frame of the scale structure. The weight of the loaded truck either deforms the load cells or increases their internal pressures. Deformation is a function of the stiffness of the load cell’s materials. In most cases, the load cells deform slightly under the applied loads and elastically return to their original shape once the load is removed. Electrical sensors measure the deformation of the load cells’ body and send electrical or (if the load cell is pressure activated) hydrostatic signals to a monitoring station. By tallying the readings from all the individual load cells in the scale, relating the measured deformations to the load cell material’s elasticity, the station can determine and display the vehicle’s weight. The trucks are weighed twice: once when they enter the facility to get a weight when fully loaded and once when leaving the facility to get a weight when empty. The difference between the two weights is the weight of the waste load deposited at the transfer station.

A good example of a truck-weighing system that has been successfully integrated into transfer station operations is that of the Survivor truck scales manufactured by Rice Lake Weighing Systems. Designed for durability and long-term performance, these scales are constructed of structural steel arranged in a support structure whose innovative design is intended to promote greater accuracy, less downtime, and greater operational lifetime. Several different models are available (aboveground, recessed pit, and portable) and can be custom built to exact specifications.

Results of the weighing operations are clearly indicated (even in direct sunlight) on the unit’s M-Series remote display. Its Intellibright feature uses a photo sensor to read available ambient light and adjusts the brightness of the display accordingly. The display apparatus provides readings from the unit’s MHMI digital weight indicators. The company’s Model 920i programmable HMI Indicator/Controller provides open connectivity to standard networking interfaces. A single 920i indicator is capable of handling multiple scales, storing, manipulating, and reporting data. Hard copies of this accumulated data are issued from Rice Lake’s ATK automated ticketing kiosks. The quick availability of weight tickets produced by a user-friendly interface reduces truck queuing and increases material movement efficiencies.

Dispatching
Communications with incoming waste-collection trucks and outgoing waste-transfer trucks is important to avoid unnecessary waiting caused by queues. Timing is everything, and detailed scheduling is established and ensured by communications and GPS tracking of incoming and outgoing traffic to ensure proper timing. Communicating with your vehicle fleet is not just a simple matter of talking to the driver over a two-way radio; a traditional CB radio will do that.

Today’s dispatching operations require more sophisticated tools to facilitate broader integration between operations and real-time data transfer. As solid waste operators continue to struggle with rising costs, the need to integrate systems and measure performance has never been greater. An example of a product that allows for this higher level of communication is the system provided by Routeware. Led by experienced solid waste industry veterans, Routeware recently unveiled its “Smart Truck” technology, which is designed to manage key operating variables in real time. What’s more, the system is capable of integrating with key elements of a transfer station operation to seamlessly link truck weights and scale systems.

The fully integrated “brains” of the system, the DMS 5000, integrates with a GIS-based routing system to route vehicles and show locations efficiently, all in real time, while capturing relevant service data and exceptions. This data enables the fleet to operate and dispatch more effectively from pickup to the transfer station. Routeware also has the ability to create custom packages and reports that leverage a wide array of add-on features, including: scale integration, digital camera and video capability, maintenance diagnostics, and RFID technology for service verification or container inventory purposes. The DMS 5000 is capable of organizing operational data into one easy-to-access-and-utilize package that is based on the operational and reporting needs of the customer. Wi-Fi allows for the real-time transmission of all of the integrated activities, making it simple to monitor the progression of routes and facilitate changes.

The addition of scale integration is a significant feature of the Smart Truck technology because it allows for onsite verification of container weight and collation of customer data, which can be critical to maintaining proper customer pricing. In addition, the scale integration feature can provide the means to monitor and optimize available truck capacity and to avoid dangerous and costly overweight situations on route and transfer vehicles. Weight data captured by the onboard scale system can also be directly integrated with third-party scales at a transfer station, landfill, or other destination.

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Truck-mounted cameras can record virtually all route activities and serve as proof of service exceptions, eligible for additional charges. The digital photo function allows the operator to save and organize photos by customer, location or other service records specified by the operator, creating a visual record of the service rendered. The DMS 5000 can be integrated with a maintenance diagnostics program to monitor engine hours as a precursor to preventative maintenance schedules. The RFID feature automatically reads passive tags on containers to match and verify loads to customers and locations, and to create a daily log relative to containers or other assets located in the field.

Routing
Routing is the planning performed prior to dispatching the trucks on their collection and hauling routes. It is done to determine the optimum routes to be traveled by the collection and transfer trucks entering and leaving the transfer station. Until the advent of intelligent software, this task was usually more art than science. Routing software searches out the most efficient routes possible (routes that avoid dead ends and backtracking). Any truck movement that results in a truck retracing its steps is wasted movement and a loss of time and money. Next Page >

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