Science Inventory

SITE DEMONSTRATION OF MINERGY GLASS FURNACE TREATMENT OF PCBS, PCDDS/FS, AND METALS IN RIVER SEDIMENT

Citation:

Richards*, M K., K. G. Partymiller, J. W. Dauchy, AND K. W. Brown. SITE DEMONSTRATION OF MINERGY GLASS FURNACE TREATMENT OF PCBS, PCDDS/FS, AND METALS IN RIVER SEDIMENT . R. Surampalli (ed.), Practice Periodical of Hazardous, Toxic and Radioactive Waste Management. American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), Reston, VA, 9(3):158-166, (2005).

Description:

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Superfund Innovative Technology Evaluation (SITE) program selected the Glass Furnace Technology (GFT) treatment process for evaluation. The GFT was developed by Minergy Corporation (Minergy) as an ex situ remediation technology to treat river sediment contaminated with polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), other organic compounds, and metals. The pilot-scale demonstration of the GFT was conducted at Minergy's GlassPack Test Center facility in Winneconne, Wisconsin. In the GFT treatment, dewatered sediment is dried, flux is added to control melting temperatures and improve the physical properties of the glass aggregate product, and then the sediment and flux mixture is melted at a temperature of about 1,600�C, removing or destroying PCBs and organic contaminants, and encapsulating metals. The molten glass drops into a water quench and shatters, producing glass aggregate with particles the size of coarse sand. The developer claims the glass aggregate meets state regulatory criteria for beneficial reuse. The main objectives of the SITE GFT demonstration were to determine the treatment efficiency of PCBs in river sediment when processed in the Minergy GFT and to determine whether the GFT glass aggregate product meets the criteria for beneficial reuse under relevant federal and state regulations. In August of 2001, a technology evaluation was conducted on about 17,000 pounds of river sediment dredged from the Lower Fox River in Green Bay, Wisconsin; the geometric average concentration of PCBs in the melter feed (dried sediment) was 27.8 �g/g, while the geometric mean in the glass aggregate product was 136 pg/g. Analytical data indicate that the GFT was able to significantly reduce PCB contamination in all samples. Overall, the GFT successfully removed or destroyed 99.9995% of the PCBs in the river sediment, measured as total PCBs. The GFT also reduced the concentration of dioxins and furans in dried sediment. The geometric mean of the total dioxin and furan concentrations in the melter feed was 116,000 pg/g, while the geometric mean in the glass aggregate was 2.26 pg/g, a reduction of greater than 99.9995%. Samples of the glass aggregate were crushed and subjected to ASTM and synthetic precipitation leaching procedure analyses. The results of the leaching tests indicated no detections of contaminants of concern in leachates for either method. The GFT produced glass aggregate that met Wisconsin Administrative Code Chapter NR 538 Category 2 criteria and qualified for beneficial reuse under the Regulation. This qualification allows a range of uses, including as an additive to concrete, a material in floor tiles, and as construction fill. Based on information from Minergy and observations made during the SITE evaluation, the estimated treatment cost is $38.74 per ton of dredged-and-dewatered sediment containing 50% moisture. Unit costs are based on a I5-year project life expectancy and may depend on the location of the treatment facility, amount of moisture in the sediment, and potential end use of the product.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:07/01/2005
Record Last Revised:08/24/2005
Record ID: 106831