RESUMO
Plasma gasification is an innovative technology for transforming high calorific waste streams into a valuable synthesis gas and a vitrified slag by means of a thermal plasma. A test program has been set up to evaluate the feasibility of plasma gasification and the impact of this process on the environment. RDF (refuse derived fuel) from carpet and textile waste was selected as feed material for semi-pilot gasification tests. The aim of the tests was: (1) to evaluate the technical feasibility of making a stable synthesis gas; (2) to characterize the composition of this synthesis gas; (3) to define a suitable after-treatment configuration for purification of the syngas and (4) to characterize the stability of the slag, i.e., its resistance to leaching for use as a secondary building material. The tests illustrate that plasma gasification can result in a suitable syngas quality and a slag, characterized by an acceptable leachability. Based on the test results, a further scale-up of this technology will be prepared and validation tests run.
Assuntos
Recuperação e Remediação Ambiental/métodos , Gases , Resíduos , Metais Pesados/análise , Oxidantes , Projetos PilotoRESUMO
Pseudomonas putida BN210, carrying the self- transferable clc-element encoding degradation of 3-chlorobenzoate on the chromosome, was used as inoculum in different membrane biofilm reactors treating 3-chlorobenzoate-contaminated model wastewater. Analysis of the bacterial population in the effluent and in the biofilm showed the loss of BN210 beyond detection from the reactors and the appearance of several novel 3-chlorobenzoate mineralizing bacteria mainly belonging to the beta-proteobacteria. In contrast, in non-inoculated reactors, no 3-chlorobenzoate degradation was observed and no 3-chlorobenzoate degraders could be recovered. Southern blots hybridization of genomic DNA using clc-element-specific probes and FIGE analysis indicated the presence of the complete clc-element in one or more copies in the isolates. Moreover, the isolates could transfer the clc genes to Ralstonia metallidurans recipients. Two representative reactor isolates, Ralstonia sp. strains KP3 and KP9 demonstrated a higher growth rate on 3-chlorobenzoate than strain BN210 in batch cultures. When BN210, KP3 and KP9 were simultaneously inoculated in a membrane reactor supplied with 3-chlorobenzoate, strain KP3 outcompeted the two other strains and remained the major 3-chlorobenzoate degrading population in the reactor. Our data suggest that in situ horizontal transfer of the clc-element from the inoculum to contaminant bacteria in the reactors was involved in the establishment of novel 3-chlorobenzoate degrading populations that were more competitive under the defined reactor conditions than the inoculum strain.