September-October 2006

Landfill Waste Compaction Strategies - Tools and Techniques

The landfill operator’s primary goal is to reduce the volume of incoming waste by compacting it to the highest density possible in the most cost-effective manner.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

By Daniel P. Duffy

Comments


Geometry also plays a role. The slope of the working face should not exceed 3 horizontal to 1 vertical (33%). The flatter the slope, the more of the equipment’s weight is translated into direct compaction as a result of the geometry of the applied forces. For example, the 33% slope has an angle to the horizontal of 18.43 degrees. The cosine of this angle is 0.948 so only about 95% of the equipment’s weight is actually compacting the waste underneath. Since the compaction tends to create a small wave of waste in front of it and to its side as a result of the pressure distribution through the waste, it is often useful to have a pair of compactors working in tandem. If a landfill has skilled and experienced waste compactor operators (as well as a relatively flat working face) these compactors can operate in parallel and opposite directions.

Balers and Balefills
Balers are machines that take in waste, compact it to a high density and bundle it with wire so it holds its shape, though some waste balers rely on the post compaction adhesion of the waste to hold the bale’s shape. This shape is usually a rectangular block whose dimensions typically vary from 3 feet to 8 feet. The bales resemble larger versions of standard hay bales or very large blocks. As such, the waste bales can be stacked like blocks and laid like bricks.

The standard method of in-place waste compaction is that of using specialist earthmovers.

So why bale waste instead of compacting it with standard waste compaction equipment? First, baling achieves a much higher density with an additional one-third reduction in waste volume. While compaction equipment increases in-place waste density to 40 or 50 lbs per cubic foot, a baler can achieve densities of 60 to 75 lbs per cubic foot. The bales have inherently better internal strength characteristics and therefore more resistant to slope failure than compacted waste. Stable bale slopes can be steeper than compacted waste slopes. This method requires less landfill volume and footprint. Bales are resistant to wind and disease vectors and therefore require little or no daily cover to prevent windblown debris and infestations. The bales also tend to shed precipitation, reducing the level of contaminants in the leachate, since most percolation flows around instead of through the bales. In short, baling results in a cleaner, more efficient, and safer landfill.

So why isn’t everyone baling waste? First off, a baler represents a significant up-front capital cost. It can be very expensive to own and operate a baling machine. All that compaction requires a lot of energy, so monthly electrical costs may be prohibitive. By comparison, operating and maintaining a fleet of standard compaction equipment is relatively cheap. Baler operations are difficult in cold temperatures. So landfills in northern tier states will have to install their balers in heated enclosures. Operating a baler requires specialized training and safety standards. Lastly, given the nature of baling operations (the confined compaction of large hard-and-sharp objects) wear and tear on a baler can be extreme.

Balemaster USA offers a line of over 100 different baler models whose capacity ranges from a single half-ton bale per workday to 20 minibales per hour. The company’s E-series is used in a variety of landfill and recycling operations. The system’s density controls automatically adjust the force applied to the compacted material. Sizes range from the 200-series, which handles low-volume applications and paper, film and foil, through the 400-series, which manages hard-to-compact materials like folding cartons, chipboard, boxboard, and a variety of coated stocks, to the 1800-series, which compacts PET bottles, aluminum cans, and other slippery materials.

More and more municipal solid waste landfills have adopted balers as part of their disposal operations. The city of Rawlings, WY, has successfully used a baler at its landfill for the past 25 years. Its Mosley-Badger baler is housed in an enclosed structure. They have found that not only has the baler improved operational efficiencies and reduced airspace needs by over two thirds (the landfills remaining operating life has been extended from 8 to 25 years), it has had a positive aesthetic effect with the elimination of blown debris and litter. The baler produces easily handled bales measuring 3 feet by 3 feet by 4 feet, which are taken out to the current disposal area and stacked. Each stack is covered with daily cover soil except for the next day’s working face.

The Montgomery County and Stewart County (“Bi-County”) Solid Waste Authority in Tennessee has been using a pair of Harris Waste Management Group refuse balers to compact the waste, extending the life of the landfill by reducing airspace needs. Here, the operators have found that the balers control pests (virtually eliminating insect and rodent vectors), improve the landfill’s appearance with its neatly stacked bales and lack of blown litter, reduce operating costs (since waste disposal operations with bales require few operators and equipment at the working face), greatly reduce the threat of fire hazard, and minimize odor problems.

Dynamic Compaction
Dynamic consolidation is an extreme method of compacting refuse and waste fill. This technique involves dropping heavy weights (15–20 tons) onto the surface of the fill from a height of 30 to 60 feet on a grid pattern whose spacing is determined by the weight being dropped and the nature of the waste. The impacts produce shock waves that extend deep into the landfill; therefore there is no need for the impact points to overlap. Dynamic compaction isn’t just used to minimize airspace. The high densities achieved by this method create very stable foundations for construction. Despite its organic content, municipal solid waste compacted with this method has superior bearing capacities and limited long-term differential settlement. Instead of using the landfill in post closure as a green space, a dynamically impacted landfill is suitable for commercial development and even the construction of roadways.

Yet this technique is not quite as simple as using a crane to raise a weight and then letting it drop. The equipment performing this task is subject to often-severe operational strains. Optimizing the impact of the dropped weights involves detailed analysis of the counterweights, bending moments in the crane’s framework, power conversion applied to the torque used to raise the weight, strain elongation on the lifting cable, the size and diameter of the dropped weight, clutch and brake operations, and the potential for crane overturning on an initially unstable foundation. This operation should be left to professional contractors who specialize in dynamic compaction.

Waste compactors spread as well as compact deposited waste.

Advertisement

Different energy levels are used to compact waste at different depths. Initially, the heaviest impact (with the weight dropped from the highest point) is used to achieve compaction in waste at significant depths. Waste nearer the surface is often displaced by the craters created by these initial deep impacts. Moderate drops with less impact energy are then used to compact waste at middle depths. Finally, shallow drops with the least impact energy are used to compact waste at or just beneath the surface. Moderate and shallow compacting also requires proportionally fewer numbers of blows per unit area than deep compaction. All the impacts dislodge waste near the surface instead of effectively compacting it. Therefore, waste near the surface to a depth of 3 feet may have to be compacted with a traditional roller compactor. For area compaction in landfills, a wide-diameter weight is best suited. Narrow diameter weights are usually used to create compacted columns of soil in otherwise soft conditions.

Shredders
Shredders have been traditionally used to render large objects such as white goods (major appliances), brown goods (large pieces of furniture), tires, and tree trunks into smaller pieces prior to disposal in the landfill. Shredders are also useful for creating fluff at transfer stations that can be more easily transported to the landfill. Shredders have also been traditionally used to prepare waste for use as refuse derived fuel in waste to energy plants.
The material produced by shredders is more easily handled, spread, and compacted than the whole goods fed into the shredders. Most of the objects in question consist mostly of air. Just imagine how much space is taken up by a tire’s bulk but how little is actually made up of the tire body itself. A cabinet or other piece of furniture has large voids for shelves or drawers. However, none of these large goods can be easily compacted in place even by the heaviest compactor. Next Page >

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get MSW Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our MSW email newsletter!