Print Email Facebook Twitter Design of Microbial Methane Oxidation Systems for Landfills Title Design of Microbial Methane Oxidation Systems for Landfills Author Gebert, J. (TU Delft Geo-engineering) Huber-Humer, Marion (University of Natural Resources and Applied Life Sciences, Vienna) Cabral, Alexandre R. (University of Sherbrooke) Date 2022 Abstract Landfill methane currently represents the largest global source of greenhouse gas emissions from the solid waste sector. Emissions are expected to increase due to increasing waste generation, particularly in countries still landfilling biodegradable wastes. As a complementary measure to gas extraction with subsequent flaring or energy conversion, or for emissions reduction from old landfills or from landfills containing wastes with a low gas potential, microbial methane oxidation systems (MMOS) are considered a promising technology. Numerous studies relating to controlling factors and enhancement of microbial methane oxidation in biocovers, biowindows or biofilters, both in laboratory and in large scale field settings, have been published. The design of optimized MMOS requires thorough understanding of the involved processes, specifically the biological ones and of those related to the transport of gas and water in porous media, and of the impact of material properties and external environmental factors on these processes. Consequently, the selection of materials that are suitable from a biogeochemical and from a geotechnical point of view, meeting the required water and gas transport properties, are key aspects in the design process. This paper reviews the scientific background of the relevant concepts and processes dictating MMOS performance, and provides guidance on layout and design steps, including choice of materials and quality control. Further, a decision tree to support the choice of MMOS is proposed. This paper provides the scientific foundation for upcoming technical guidance documents. Subject Methane oxidationbiofilterbiowindowbiocoverdesignconsructionmonitoring To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:2bf3a211-aa92-46dd-b497-e08c05794c9d DOI https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2022.907562 ISSN 2296-665X Source Frontiers in Environmental Science, 10 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type review Rights © 2022 J. Gebert, Marion Huber-Humer, Alexandre R. Cabral Files PDF fenvs_10_907562.pdf 3.41 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:2bf3a211-aa92-46dd-b497-e08c05794c9d/datastream/OBJ/view