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Title: Website download address


1
Website download address
  • Air Pollution
  • http//www.public.iastate.edu/sung/ce326/air.ppt
  • Solid Waste Management
  • http//www.public.iastate.edu/sung/ce326/msw.p
    pt
  • Hazardous Waste Management
  • http//www.public.iastate.edu/sung/ce326/hwm.p
    pt

2
  • Scope of Hazardous Waste (HW) Problem
  • 1985 EPA Survey 2,959 facilities managing 247
    mil. tons of HW
  • Chemical Manufacturers surveyed 681 industrial
    plants 213 mil. Tons (approx. Assoc. (CMA)
    1985 48 - 68 of total HW generation)
  • Congressional Budget 223 308 mil. Tons

    Office (1982)
  • Office of Technology 255 275 mil. Tons

    Assessment
  • EPA National Biennial 20,233 generators and 3078
    Treatment, Storage or Hazardous Waste Disposal
    Facilities (TSDFs)
    Report 60 TSDFs managed 93 of HW

3
  • Breakdown of the major HW are as follows
  • 51 Chemical Products
  • 7 Transportation Equipment
  • 9 Petroleum and Coal Products
  • 9 Electronics
  • 8 Primary Metals
  • 16 All other industries

4
  • Overview of Hazardous Waste Management
  • General definition of hazardous
  • Potentially dangerous or harmful to human health
    or environment
  • Capable of causing adverse physiological effects
  • Statutes that primary address hazardous wastes
    are the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
    (RCRA) and the Comprehensive Environmental
    Response, Compensation and Liability Act
    (CERCLA).
  • RCRA is focused on the existing, active and
    future hazardous waste sites and management
  • CERCLA is focused on inactive hazardous waste
    disposal sites (Superfund)

5
  • General Description of CERCLA
  • The Comprehensive Environmental Response,
    Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA) was
    enacted by Congress on Dec. 11, 1980. CERCLA is
    commonly known as Superfund. This law gives the
    Federal Government authority to respond to
  • (a) Emergencies involving immediate and
    uncontrolled release of HW whether on land or in
    navigable waters
  • (b) Identify uncontrolled and abandoned HW sites
    and ensure clean-up of the worst HW sites
  • (c) Compel those responsible for the problem to
    clean-up the HW sites at their own expense or to
    recover the costs of federal actions

6
  • General Description of CERCLA (continued)
  • CERCLA created a Hazardous Substances Release
    Trust Fund from taxes on the chemical and
    petroleum industries. Funds collected are used
    for the clean up of abandoned or controlled HW
    sites.
  • CERCLA was amended in Oct 17, 1986 by the
    Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act
    (SARA). SARA significantly increase the size and
    scope of CERCLA program.
  • CERCLA also established a priority list of
    abandoned or inactive HW sites for cleanup
    called the National Priority List (NPL)

7
  • RCRA Introduction and History
  • Enact in 1976 to fill the regulatory pollution
    control gap between the Clean Air Act (1970) and
    the Clean Water Act (1972)
  • Enacted as an amendment to the Solid Waste
    Disposal Act delegated US EPA the task of
    defining what substances are hazardous wastes
    and how these wastes should be regulated in order
    to prevent harm to human health or the
    environment
  • In 1984, Congress amended RCRA through the
    Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments (HSWA).
    Amendments were made in response to EPAs
    inability over the previous eight years to
    promulgate effective and satisfactory
    regulations. HSWA gave more specific guidelines
    for regulations, timetable for promulgation of
    regulations by installing minimum regulatory
    controls or hammers to promote rapid promulgation
    of regulations.
  • Sections of RCRA that are important are Subtitle
    C of RCRA which establish a program to manage HW
    from cradle-to-grave and a program for
    identifying and listing HW

8
  • Identifying Hazardous Waste
  • RARC Sec. 1004 (5) defines a hazardous waste as
  • .. A solid waste, or a combination of solid
    wastes, which because of its quantity,
    concentration, or physical, chemical or
    infectious characteristics may (a) cause, or
    significantly contribute to an increase in
    mortality or increase in serious irreversible, or
    incapacitating reversible illness or (b) pose a
    substantial present or potential hazard to human
    health or the environment when improperly
    treated, stored, transported or disposed of or
    otherwise managed.
  • By definition, all hazardous waste it must
    first be a solid waste. (Therefore, hazardous
    waste is a subset of solid wastes.)

9
  • Statutory definition of solid waste
  • . Garbage, refuse, sludge from a waste
    treatment plant, water supply treatment plant, or
    air pollution control facility and discarded
    materials including solid, liquid, semi-solids or
    contained gaseous materials resulting from
    industrial, commercial, mining and agricultural
    operations, and from community activities but
    does not include solid or dissolved materials in
    domestic sewage, or irrigation return flows or
    industrial discharges which are point sources,
    special nuclear or by-product material as defined
    by the Atomic Energy Act of 1954.

10
  • A Solid Waste is a Discarded Material
  • Under RCRA, a material must be discarded before
    it becomes a solid waste. RCRA was not intended
    to regulate raw materials or products, regardless
    of their hazardous characteristics, unless they
    have been discarded.
  • The cradle-to-grave concept regulate the HW
    generators, transporters, and TSDFs and involves
    EPA, State and local regulatory agencies. The
    cradle-to-grave concept requires generators,
    transporters and TSDFs
  • - to obtain an EPA Indentification Number
  • - to use an uniform HW manifest that contains
    information on the generator, transporters, and
    TSDFs to track and manage HWs
  • - to adopt DOT regulations for proper packaging
    and identification of HW during shipment
  • - to provide guidelines for the safe disposal of
    HW by TSDFs

11
HW Manifest
12
TSDFs
  • Treatment, Storage or Disposal Facilities (TSDFs)
    include
  • landfills,
  • above ground tank systems,
  • surface impoundments,
  • waste piles,
  • land treatment,
  • incinerators,
  • other thermal treatment units,
  • chemical, physical and biological treatment units
    and
  • underground injection wells.

13
Cradle-to-Grave Concept - Manifest System
Transporters
TSDFs
Generators
EPA
State
14
  • When is a Solid Waste a Hazardous Waste
  • A waste may be classified as a hazardous waste if
    the waste meets the criteria for any of the
    following categories
  • Listed Waste
  • F, K, P or U wastes
  • 2. Characteristics Wastes
  • Ignitability, Corrosivity, Reactivity, or
    Toxicity
  • Mixed Wastes and Derived From Rules (not
    discuss in this class)

15
  • Listed Hazardous Wastes
  • US EPA idenfied specific solid wastes that are
    hazardous wastes because of known hazardous
    characteristics. These lists consist of
  • F Waste (40 CFR 261.32) manufacturing wastes
    from nonspecific sources, eg., spent solvents,
    electroplating wastes, wood preserving wastes
    (tetrachloroethylene, trichloroethylene)
  • K Waste (40 CFR 261.32) manufacturing wastes from
    specific industrial processes, eg., wastes from
    wood preserving and petroleum refining industries
    (eg., distillation bottoms from production of
    acetaldehyde from ethylene)
  • P Waste (40 CFR 261.33(3)) discarded chemical
    products or intermediates that are acutely toxic
    wastes
  • U Waste (40 CFR 261.33(f)) discarded chemical
    products or intermediates that present risks of
    chronic toxicity from exposure
  • P and U wastes contain specific chemicals such as
    organics, pesticides and acids (eg., acetone,
    aldicarb)

16
  • 2. Characteristic Wastes
  • Waste may be regulated for exhibiting one of the
    following characteristics of a hazardous waste as
    determined by the EPA
  • Ignitability
  • Liquid except aqueous solutions containing less
    than 24 alcohol, that has flash point less than
    60oC
  • Nonliquid capable, under normal conditions of
    spontaneous and sustained combustion
  • Ignitable compressed gas under DOT regulations
  • Oxidizer under DOT regulations
  • Corrosivity
  • Aqueous material with pH less than or equal to 2
    or greater than or equal to 12.5
  • A liquid that corrodes steel at a rate greater or
    equal than ¼ inch per year at a temperature of
    55oC

17
  • Characteristic Wastes (continued)
  • Reactivity
  • Normally unstable and readily undergoes violent
    change without detonating
  • Forms potentially explosive mixtures with water
  • When mixed with water, it generates toxic gases,
    vapors, or fumes in a quantity sufficient to
    present a danger to human health or the
    environment.
  • It is a cyanide or sulfide bearing waste which
    exposed to pH conditions between 2 and 12.5 can
    generate toxic gases, vapors or fumes in a
    quantity sufficient to present a danger to human
    health or the environment.
  • It is capable of detonation or explosive reaction
    if subjected to a strong initiating source or if
    heated under confinement.
  • It is readily capable of detonation or explosive
    decomposition or reaction standard temperature
    and pressure
  • It is a forbidden explosive as defined in DOT
    regulations

18
  • Characteristic Wastes (continued)
  • Toxicity
  • Using an approved extraction method Toxicity
    Characteristics Leaching Procedure (TCLP), the
    extract from the waste contains any of the
    contaminants with a concentration equal to or
    greater than the values listed in the Table 10-10
    (see Text page 841)
  • TCLP test procedures
  • Solid material crush to particle size lt 9.5 mm
  • Weak acetic acid addition acid solid 20 1
    by wt.
  • 18 hrs 30 rpm at 22oC

19
Table 10-10 p841 Toxicity characteristic constitue
nts and regulatory levels
20
  • Treatment Technologies for Hazardous Wastes
  • Biological treatment, eg., use of conventional
    biological treatment processes such as activated
    sludge system and trickling filters to treat
    hazardous organic compounds
  • Chemical Treatment for detoxifying HW include
    neutralization using acid or bases oxidation
    using chlorine, hydrogen peroxide and ozone and
    chemical precipitation adsorption using granular
    activated carbon or ion exchange resin and
    stabilization/solidification
  • Physical Treatment separation or concentration
    of HW using distillation, filtration, membrane
    processes such as reverse osmosis
  • Thermal Processes destruction of waste by high
    temperature, eg., incineration
  • Land Disposal such as deep well injection,
    landfills, and surface impoundments

21
Minimum requirement for a Secure Landfill design
Page 891
22
  • Destruction Removal Efficiency (DRE)
  • DRE of 49s means 99.99

Example An initial concentration of contaminant
is 100 mg/L The concentration after treatment is
0.1 mg/L DRE (100 0.1)/100 0.999
99.9 gt 39s or 3 log reduction
23
polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)
  • over 200 isomers
  • different chlorine composition (Araclor 1248)
  • virtually indestructible - useful as transformer
    fluid (in every transformer 1930 - 1970)
  • toxic effects to exposed workers noted in 1937
  • environmental contamination realized in 1969

24
dioxin
o
  • dibenzo - ? - dioxin
  • over twenty different isomers
  • byproduct of herbicide/pesticide manufacture
  • created during incineration of hazardous wastes
  • contaminant in 2,4-D, agent orange and others
  • carcinogenic, teratogenic, mutagenic,
    embryo-toxic in animal studies
  • bioaccumulates in fatty tissue
  • no known link to human effects

25
Calculating Cancer Risk for Carcinogen
Where TR Target cancer risk (dimensionless) Cw
Concentration of chemical of concern in water
(mg/L) IR Ingestion rate of water (L/day) EF
Exposure frequency (days/yr) ED Exposure
duration (yr) BW Body weight (Kg) ATc
Averaging time (life expectancy) for cancer
(days) SF0 Oral cancer slope factor (Kgday/mg)
26
Slope Factor
Dose response curve
Risk, dimensionless
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
Slope at response of 1x10-6 Slope factor
(Kgday/mg)
1x10-6
Dose, mg/Kgday
EPA accept Linearized multistage extrapolation
method to estimate SF
27
  • Generally, lifetime cancer risk is calculated by
    assuming EF x ED ATc
  • This simplifies the equation to

Some Oral Slope Factor Chemical SF0
(Kgday/mg) Arsenic (inorganic)
1.7500 Benzene 0.0290 Chloroform
0.0061 Hexachlorobenzene
1.6000 Hydrazine 3.0000
28
Example Problem 1 Determine the lifetime risk
of cancer from drinking well water contaminated
with 0.5 mg/L benzene for five years. Assume IR
2.0 L/day BW 70 Kg ATc (70365)
25,550 days
About 1 in 100,000
29
Example Problem 2 Determine the lifetime risk
of cancer from drinking a water source that
contains the MCL for benzene.
MCL maximum contaminated level MCL for benzene
0.005 mg/L (Text page 218 Table 4-7)
About 1 in 1,000,000
30
  • Flash Point The temperature at which a liquid or
    volatile solid gives off vapor sufficient to form
    an ignitable mixture with air

Back
31
  • Chemical Precipitation for Heavy Metals Removal
  • Example
  • What is the minimum pH to have a Ca(OH)2 solution
    with Cu2 ion conc. lt 0.5 mg/L?

Ksp 2 x 10 -19 0.5 mg/L / (1000 mg/g x 63.54
g/mole) x OH-2 OH- 1.59 x 10-7 Kw H
OH- 1 x 10-14 Therefore H 10-14 / 1.59
x 10-7 6.28 x 10-8 gt pH -log H 7.2
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