In the present investigation, for the first time in Iran, dewatered
sludge waste from air heater washing wastewater treatment of a thermal
power plant was subjected to investigation of the cement base
stabilization and solidification experiments in order to reduce the
mobility of heavy and other hazardous metals as well as increasing the
compressive strength of the solidified product for possible reuse of
the waste. The solidification was done with two cement based mix
designs with different waste/cement ratio is different samples. The
results of leaching test on the solidified samples revealed that
regarding the sand-cement mixture even with 25% waste/cement ratio, the
leaching of heavy metals has completely been controlled up to 95%. In
cement stabilization process the leaching of V, Ni, Zn and Cr could be
decreased from 314.1, 209.1, 24.8 and 5.5 mg/L respectively in the raw
waste to 6, 32.1, 3.6 and 3.6 mg/L in a mixture with 20% waste/cement
ratio. During stabilization with cement-sand, the TCLP leachate
contents of mentioned metals have been decreased to 4.2, 16.2, 2.5 and
2.2 mg/L with waste/cement ratio of 20%. X-ray diffraction studies
showed that portlandite, calcite, lime, larnite and quartz have been
shaped during the stabilization process. The compressive strength test
results revealed that in both mixture samples, decreasing the
compressive strength with increasing the amount of waste content in the
mixture occurs. In sand-cement solidified samples with waste/cement
ratio 25% and in cement solidified samples with waste/cement ratio 20%,
a 40% decrease occurs in the compressive strength in comparison with
the waste free mixtures