Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7494542 Resources, Conservation and Recycling 2018 8 Pages PDF
Abstract
The environmental and economic qualities associated with processing recycled glass cullet recovered from a municipal solid waste (MSW) materials recovery facility (MRF) into glass powder (GP) to be used as a pozzolanic material in the production of portland cement concrete were assessed. Through an evaluation of life cycle impacts and system costs, the feasibility of a potential pozzolan market was evaluated in comparison to the two most common management strategies for recycled glass cullet: (1) traditional recycling into new glass containers, and (2) disposal to a landfill (including potential use as landfill depression fill material). The investment of a MRF in a GP processing system became feasible if at least 50,000 metric tonnes (tonnes) of cullet were processed annually (based on a 10-year lifespan and 4500 h per year plant operating time). At this annual throughput capacity, a MRF could achieve a processing cost capable of producing GP at a cost competitive with the current retail value of Class F coal fly ash, another known pozzolan. GP processing costs decreased as annual cullet throughput increased. The feasibility of such a GP pozzolan market was further analyzed through an applied case study of MRF cullet availability in North Central Florida, USA.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
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