March-April 2005

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ADC Combinations

In today's race toward ultimate landfill efficiency, alternative daily cover is no longer just a staple of landfill operations.

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By Neal Bolton

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For those in the know, the creative use of alternative daily cover (ADC) has become a yardstick for measuring the performance of landfills. Many landfills that have made the decision to use ADC are now looking at the various choices out there and asking, "How can ADC be used in the most creative and cost-effective manner?” The answer that many landfill managers are coming up with is by selecting various types of ADC based on an individual landfill's needs or goals.

Many people speak English, but few can put words together as effectively as Abraham Lincoln or Winston Churchill did. We all wear clothes, but Jacqueline Kennedy and Princess Diana set a whole new standard.

Along those same creative lines, some landfills are using the basic ingredients of tarps, films, sprays, greenwaste, and other types of ADC to cook up some very innovative and efficient combinations.

So how are those trend-setting landfills using various types of ADC to work smarter? Let's start by reviewing some of the more common types of manufactured ADC materials.

Photo: Puente Hills Landfill

Tarps
Tarps are one of the most common types of manufactured ADC and one of the most versatile. Depending on your specific wants, needs, and budget, you can choose from thin, thick, woven, non-woven, and a variety of colors including white, brown, and green.

Small tarps can be placed manually, but this method often requires workers to walk in the trash. For safety's sake that's not a good idea. Placement of large tarps requires some machine assistance. Often, large tarps are simply dragged into place by operators who see this method as quick, cheap, and easy—until they have to replace the torn tarps. A better method is to use an excavator and spreader bar to lift the tarps into place. This method is much easier on the tarps.

Perhaps the most efficient method for placing tarps is offered by the Tarp-O-Matic system. Because of this system's ability to gently place and retrieve tarps, some Tarp-O-Matic users report tarps lasting through 18 or more months of regular use.

Film
Film machines roll out a thin sheet of plastic and then trickle sand, gravel, or soil on top to hold it in place. Film is quick and easy to place, but of course you must purchase the film. If your goal is to keep workers out of the trash, maximize runoff, and avoid having to retrieve a tarp that's covered with a foot of fresh snow, you may want to consider film.

Photo: Puente Hills Landfill

Sprays
Many landfills use spray-on ADC. These materials offer great flexibility in terms of access and application. Some utilize a cement-based mix. Others may use recycled newspaper. Each has pros and cons. All sprays offer the ability to cover oddly shaped areas as easily as those cells with textbook geometry. Also, with spray-on materials, you can easily adjust the thickness of the application in anticipation of a big rainstorm or to provide extra protection for an area that you won't get back to for a longer-than-normal period of time.

Waste-Derived Material
Additionally, a wide variety of ADC materials derive from diverted waste. These include greenwaste, C&D, contaminated soil, chipped tires, auto-shredder fluff, and many more.

Similarly, if you're interested in using a waste material for ADC but don't know where to start, try contacting your state regulatory agency and ask them what other landfills in your state are using.

Trade journals, conferences, and organizations like SWANA are a good source of information on the types of manufactured and waste-derived ADC materials that are available. You may also want to check the Internet. I recently typed in the search words alternative daily cover and landfill on an Internet search engine and got 6,300 hits. There's a lot of information out there.

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Or you may simply look at what's coming into your landfill right now.

A decade after the start of the California gold rush, miners in western Nevada were still looking for gold but becoming frustrated with a slate-gray muck that kept plugging up their sluice boxes and other mining equipment. Finally somebody had it assayed and it turned out to be rich in silver. The resulting Comstock Lode produced billions (in today's dollars) of riches—and it started with a material that was in the way and a hassle to deal with. Next Page >

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