Print Email Facebook Twitter Spatial Variability of Gas Composition and Flow in a Landfill Under In-Situ Aeration Title Spatial Variability of Gas Composition and Flow in a Landfill Under In-Situ Aeration Author Meza Ramos, P.N. (TU Delft Geo-engineering) Lammen, Hans (Afvalzorg - Sustainable Development, Assendelft) Cruz, Carmen (Afvalzorg - Sustainable Development, Assendelft) Heimovaara, T.J. (TU Delft Geoscience and Engineering) Gebert, J. (TU Delft Geo-engineering) Department Geoscience and Engineering Date 2022 Abstract In-situ aeration of landfills accelerates biodegradation of waste organic matter and hence advances waste stabilization. The spatial outreach of aeration greatly affects stabilization efficiency. This study analyzed the spatial variability of gas composition and flow in 230 wells spread over four compartments of a Dutch landfill which is under in situ aeration since 2017, as well as the carbon extraction efficiency, tem-perature, and settlement. Flow rates and gas composition in the extraction wells varied strongly. The highest variability was observed in the compartment with the highest water tables with submerged filter screens for most wells, with low flow rates, and elevated ratios of CH4 to CO2, indicating predominance of anaerobic processes (compartment 11Z). The compartment with the most uniform distribution of gas flow rates, composition and lower ratios of CH4 to CO2, suggesting a significant share of aerobic carbon mineralization, also showed higher temperatures, a carbon extraction efficiency, and larger cumulative settlement, all indicative of enhanced microbial activity (compartment 11N). In this compartment, the amount of extracted carbon exceeded the carbon generation predicted from landfill gas modeling by the factor of 2 over the hitherto four years aeration. The effect of water tables on gas flow and the correlation between the flow, and the ratio of CH4 to CO2 appeared weak, indicating that also other factors than water tables influence gas concentration and flow. Future work includes stable isotope probing to analyze the significance of microbial respiration and microbial CH4 oxidation for the composition of the final extracted gas mixture. Subject Flow rateGas compositionIn-situ aerationLandfill stabilizationSpatial variability To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:da7df1c9-a6b1-4801-a83b-5afbf0e96736 DOI https://doi.org/10.31025/2611-4135/2022.15191 ISSN 2611-4127 Source Detritus, 19, 104-113 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights © 2022 P.N. Meza Ramos, Hans Lammen, Carmen Cruz, T.J. Heimovaara, J. Gebert Files PDF DETRITUS_19_2022_pages_10 ... 22_004.pdf 1.7 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:da7df1c9-a6b1-4801-a83b-5afbf0e96736/datastream/OBJ/view