1 research outputs found
Number concentration and chemical composition of ultrafine and nanoparticles from WTE (waste to energy) plants
Stack field testing at four municipal waste-to-energy (WTE) plants was conducted to investigate total number
concentrations and size distributions in a size range extended towards the evaluation of ultrafine (UFP)
and nanoparticle (NP) fractions with diameters smaller than 100 nm and 50 nm, respectively. Measurements
were performed with a specifically designed sampling line, equipped with a dilution system and a particle
counting device for measuring both primary particles in raw flue gases at stack conditions and the contributions
of condensable origin, arising from their cooling and dilution immediately following stack release into
the atmosphere. Average concentration levels detected ranged between 5×103–6×105 cm−3: for all sampling
conditions, ultrafine fractions largely prevailed in number size distributions, with average diameters
constantly located in the nanoparticle size range. Stack concentrations appeared to be influenced by the design
and process configuration of flue gas cleaning systems, with most significant effects related to the presence
of wet scrubbing units and the baghouse operating temperature of dry removal processes. Chemical
speciation (i.e., trace metals, anions and cations, carbonaceous compounds) of size-resolved particulate fractions
was performed on one of the plants. NP and UFP composition was essentially in accordance with the
most important fuel and combustion process characteristics: in particular, the presence of chlorides and
metal species was consistent with the respective waste feed content and their expected behavior during
combustion and flue gas cleaning processes