Search results for "achat"

showing 10 items of 89 documents

Assessment of the ecotoxicity of phytotreatment substrate soil as landfill cover material for in-situ leachate management

2019

Phytotreatment capping in closed landfills is a promising, cost-effective, in situ option for sustainable leachate treatment and might be synergistically coupled with energy crops to produce renewable energy (e.g.: biodiesel or bioethanol). This study proposes to use 0.30 m of soil as growing substrate for plants cultivated on the temporary cover of closed landfills. Once the leachate phytotreatment process is no longer required, 0.70 m of the same soil would be added to attain the final top cover configuration. This solution would entail saving the costs of excavation and backfilling. However, worsening of the initial soil quality due to potential contaminant transfer from the liquid to th…

Crops AgriculturalEisenia fetidaEnvironmental Engineering0208 environmental biotechnologyEcotoxicological bioassay02 engineering and technology010501 environmental sciencesManagement Monitoring Policy and Law01 natural sciencesEnvironmental legislationSoilSoil PollutantsLeachateWaste Management and DisposalSubstrate soil chemical characterization0105 earth and related environmental sciencesPhytotreatmentbiologyLandfill leachate phytotreatmentEnvironmental engineeringGeneral MedicineContaminationbiology.organism_classificationSoil qualityRefuse Disposal020801 environmental engineeringEnergy cropWaste Disposal FacilitiesSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataItalyBiofuelEnvironmental scienceEcotoxicityClosed landfillWater Pollutants Chemical
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Two-Stage Anaerobic Digestion of Energy Crops: Methane Production, Nitrogen Mineralisation and Heavy Metal Mobilisation

2006

Energy crops (willow, sugar beet and grass silage) were digested in pilot scale two-stage anaerobic digesters. The specific methane yields obtained were 0.16, 0.38 and 0.39 m3 kg(-1) added volatile solids (VSadded) for willow, sugar beet and grass, respectively, corresponding to yearly gross energy yields of 15, 53 and 26 megawatt-hours (MWh) per hectare. With grass and sugar beets as substrate, 84-85% of the harvestable methane was obtained within 30 days. In pilot scale two-stage digestion of willow and sugar beet, 56 and 85% of the laboratory scale methane yields were obtained, but digestion of grass in two-stage reactors yielded 5% more methane than digestion in laboratory scale complet…

Crops AgriculturalNitrogenSilageBioreactorsDigestion (alchemy)Waste ManagementBiogasMetals HeavyLoliumEnvironmental ChemistryAnaerobiosisLeachateSugarWaste Management and DisposalWater Science and TechnologybiologyChemistryfungifood and beveragesSalixGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationEnergy cropAnaerobic digestionBiodegradation EnvironmentalAgronomyTrifoliumSugar beetBeta vulgarisMethaneWater Pollutants ChemicalEnvironmental Technology
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Are discriminatory procurement policies motivated by protectionism ?

1995

When purchasing goods and services, governments often discriminate in favour of domestic suppliers. It is widely assumed that such behaviour is motivated by protectionism. Although this interpretation is sometimes valid, it is also puzzling. After reviewing some of the puzzles, the paper proposes an alternative explanation of preferential procurement based on the assumption that governmental buyers want to purchase goods and services at minimum cost, but must do this in a context in which, because of the presence of unverifiable services, contracts are necessarily incomplete. The paper argues that preferential purchasing can guarantee the efficient delivery of these unverifiable services.

Economics and EconometricsProtectionismInterpretation (philosophy)Context (language use)Achats publics[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceProtectionismPurchasingMicroeconomicsProcurementGoods and servicesGovernment procurementArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Incomplete contractsProtectionnismeEconomics[ SHS.ECO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economies and finances[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceContrats incomplets
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Influence of the Height of Municipal Solid Waste Landfill on the Formation of Perched Leachate Zones

2015

Waste settlement as well as consolidation phenomena, which occur inside a landfill for municipal solid waste (MSW), can cause a decrease in waste permeability. This can lead to a reduction in conveyance of the leachate drainage system. It is therefore possible that a so-called perched leachate zone will form. Such a zone is constituted by an area in the body of the landfill where the leachate is temporarily trapped and is unable to infiltrate downward. This phenomenon is influenced by many factors, which include rain infiltration rate, waste moisture and composition, landfill height, and so on. The main aim of the paper is to elucidate the role played by landfill height in the formation of …

Environmental EngineeringBioreactor landfillMunicipal solid wasteSettore ICAR/03 - Ingegneria Sanitaria-AmbientaleConsolidation (soil)MoistureEnvironmental engineeringPermeability (earth sciences)Hydraulic conductivityMunicipal solid waste landfillMunicipal wastes Landfill Leachate Mathematical models Settlement Hydraulic conductivityEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental scienceLeachateGeneral Environmental ScienceCivil and Structural EngineeringJournal of Environmental Engineering
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Screening of physical–chemical methods for removal of organic material, nitrogen and toxicity from low strength landfill leachates

2002

Physical-chemical methods have been suggested for the treatment of low strength municipal landfill leachates. Therefore, applicability of nanofiltration and air stripping were screened in laboratory-scale for the removal of organic matter, ammonia, and toxicity from low strength leachates (NH4-N 74-220 mg/l, chemical oxygen demand (COD) 190-920 mg O2/l, EC50 = 2-17% for Raphidocelis subcapitata). Ozonation was studied as well, but with the emphasis on enhancing biodegradability of leachates. Nanofiltration (25 degrees C) removed 52-66% of COD and 27-50% of ammonia, the latter indicating that ammonia may in part have been present as ammonium salt complexes. Biological pretreatment enhanced t…

Environmental EngineeringChemical PhenomenaNitrogenHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisDaphnia magnaWater Purificationchemistry.chemical_compoundAmmoniaOxidants PhotochemicalOzoneRaphidocelis subcapitataAmmoniaToxicity TestsAnimalsSoil PollutantsEnvironmental ChemistryWater PollutantsAmmoniumAir strippingLeachateOrganic ChemicalsbiologyChemistry PhysicalChemical oxygen demandPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthGeneral MedicineGeneral Chemistrybiology.organism_classificationPollutionAcute toxicityRefuse DisposalOxygenDaphniachemistryEnvironmental chemistryFiltrationChemosphere
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Weathering of gasification and grate bottom ash in anaerobic conditions

2009

Abstract The effect of anaerobic conditions on weathering of gasification and grate bottom ash were studied in laboratory lysimeters. The two parallel lysimeters containing the same ash were run in anaerobic conditions for 322 days, after which one was aerated for 132 days. The lysimeters were watered throughout the study and the quality of leachates and changes in the binding of elements into ash were observed. The results show that organic carbon content and initial moisture of ashes are the key parameters affecting the weathering of ashes. In the grate ash the biodegradation of organic carbon produced enough CO 2 to regulate pH. In contrast the dry gasification ash, containing little org…

Environmental EngineeringChemistryHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisCarbonationEnvironmental engineeringWeatheringCarbon DioxideHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationPollutionAbsorptionchemistry.chemical_compoundCarbonatationBottom ashEnvironmental chemistryCarbon dioxideEnvironmental ChemistryAnaerobiosisLeachateLeaching (agriculture)AerationWaste Management and DisposalJournal of Hazardous Materials
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Biological nitrogen removal from municipal landfill leachate: low-cost nitrification in biofilters and laboratory scale in-situ denitrification.

2002

The slow leaching of nitrogen from solid waste in landfills, resulting in high concentrations of ammonia in the landfill leachate, may last for several decades. The removal of nitrogen from leachate is desirable as nitrogen can trigger eutrophication in lakes and rivers. In the present study, a low-cost nitrification-denitrification process was developed to reduce nitrogen load especially in leachates from small landfills. Nitrification was studied in laboratory and on-site pilot aerobic biofilters with waste materials as filter media (crushed brick in upflow filters and bulking agent of compost in a downflow filter) while denitrification was studied in a laboratory anoxic/anaerobic column …

Environmental EngineeringDenitrificationTime FactorsNitrogenengineering.materialWater PurificationLeachateLeaching (agriculture)Waste Management and DisposalWater Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural EngineeringChromatographyBioreactor landfillCompostEcological ModelingEnvironmental engineeringHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationPulp and paper industryPollutionWaste treatmentBiofilmsBiofilterengineeringCosts and Cost AnalysisEnvironmental scienceNitrificationFiltrationWater Pollutants ChemicalWater research
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Nitrification of anaerobically pretreated municipal landfill leachate at low temperature

2000

Abstract Nitrification of anaerobically pretreated municipal landfill leachate (270–1000 mg COD l −1 , 53–270 mg NH 4 –N l −1 ) was studied in laboratory-scale activated sludge reactors without (AS) and with (ASC) the addition of plastic carrier material. The reactors were run at 10°C (149 d), 7°C (21 d) and 5°C (16 d). With a loading rate of 0.027 g NH 4 –N g MLVSS −1  d −1 and a hydraulic retention time of ca. 3 d, at 10°C, complete nitrification was obtained in both reactors. At 7°C, and in loading rate of 0.023 g NH 4 –N g MLVSS −1  d −1 , both reactors appeared to be overloaded and ammonium removal was only ca. 93%. At 5°C, with a lower loading rate of 0.010 g NH 4 –N g MLVSS −1  d −1 …

Environmental EngineeringHydraulic retention timeEcological ModelingPollutionchemistry.chemical_compoundWaste treatmentActivated sludgechemistryEnvironmental chemistryAmmoniumNitrificationLeachateWaste Management and DisposalEffluentWater Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural EngineeringWaste disposalWater Research
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Evaluation of the current status of operating and closed landfills in Russia, Finland and Ireland with regard to water pollution and methane emission

2003

The annual production of municipal solid wastes (MSW) in Russia, Finland and Ireland in the late 1990s accounts for 37.5, 2.5 and 2.05 mln. tonnes or 252, 488 and 566 kg per capita, respectively. 96.5, 64 and 91% of these wastes (for Russia, Finland and Ireland, correspondingly) are currently disposed of via landfilling. However, nowadays, MSW management in these countries is undergoing drastic changes (source separation, closure of old landfills, reduction of the number of landfills etc.) forced by recent legislation set by the European Union and Russian authorities. This paper evaluates the current status of MSW landfills, as well as information on current leachate and methane emissions i…

Environmental EngineeringMethanechemistry.chemical_compoundLandfill gaschemistryEnvironmental protectionEnvironmental monitoringPer capitaEnvironmental sciencemedia_common.cataloged_instanceLeachateEuropean unionWater pollutionTonneWater Science and Technologymedia_common
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Treatment of leachate from MSWI bottom ash landfilling with anaerobic sulphate-reducing process

2007

Abstract Removal of sulphate and toxic elements from the leachate of a field landfill lysimeter ( 112 m 3 ) , containing municipal solid waste incineration (MSWI) bottom ash, was studied. The leachate was treated in two parallel laboratory upflow anaerobic sludge blanket (UASB) reactors without and with ethanol as additional carbon source. With ethanol more than 65% of sulphate was removed, while without ethanol removal was negligible. The treatment removed Ba, Ca, Cu, Mn, Mo, Ni, Pb, Tl, Sb, Se, Sr, and Zn of the studied 35 trace and other elements. The sequential extraction of the reactor sludge at the end of runs confirmed that with a few exceptions (Ba, Ca, and Cu) the main mechanism by…

Environmental EngineeringMunicipal solid wasteIncinerationWaste Disposal Fluidchemistry.chemical_compoundMetals HeavyAnaerobiosisLeachateSulfateWaste Management and DisposalWater Science and TechnologyCivil and Structural EngineeringEthanolWaste managementSulfatesChemistryEcological ModelingExtraction (chemistry)PollutionCarbonRefuse DisposalTrace ElementsIncinerationCinderBariumBottom ashLysimeterEnvironmental chemistryCalciumOxidation-ReductionCopperWater Pollutants ChemicalWater Research
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