NO gets trash plant

Plasma gasification eliminates waste without burning trash

By Tulane Hullabaloo | Section: Feb 5th, 2010 Issues

The Sun Energy Group plans to build a plasma gasification plant in New Orleans. The plant would use a process called plasma art gasification to transform garbage into electricity to power local homes.

The process uses plasma to gasify or melt the trash that is fed into it. Plasma is also ionized, meaning that it carries an electric charge and generates a magnetic field. A frequently observed instance of such a plasma field is lightning.

Once the garbage is exposed to the plasma arc, the molecules of the substances break apart into pure atomic elements. The organic components of the trash become a gas, similar to natural gas, that can be used to generate power. The inorganic parts melt and become what is known as “slag.”

Despite some protests by local environmental groups, the facility will theoretically be environmentally friendly. Not only would the plant reduce landfill use, but since the actual molecular composition of the garbage is changed by this process, the plasma plant can take potentially hazardous materials and render them harmless.

Louis Circeo, director of the Plasma Applications Research Program at Georgia Tech Research Institute, said that the plants can “accept all solid and liquid waste” including hazardous, toxic and medical wastes.

Unlike other waste-to-energy facilities currently in the United States, plasma gasification does not burn the trash, eliminating a potential pollution problem.

“It creates no waste,” Sun Energy Group owner D’Juan Hernandez said. “There are two products: slag, which can be reformed into construction materials, and syngas, which is used for power generation.”

In a recent presentation, Circeo said that the slag that the plasma gasification generates can be used for concrete, asphalt and insulation, and can also produce recyclable metals.

Since the molten slag can be molded into almost any shape, however, there are many other possible uses for it. In a recent book, “Prescription for the Planet,” Tom Blees suggested a use for slag that could assist with another environmental problem.

“The molten slag could be poured into molds of various shapes optimally designed for use as artificial reefs,” Blees said.

Hernandez also said that using the syngas to create power will generate some emissions, but the plant should have emissions well under regulation standards and little to no other environmental consequences. Plasma gasification, however, will not override normal recycling. Recyclable materials will be sorted out at the facility and sold.

This technology may seem groundbreaking, but it has actually been used in several other countries for years. Japan has been successfully operating two gasification plants for seven years. Canada, Taiwan, and the United Kingdom also have operational plasma gasification facilities. Plants similar to the one planned in New Orleans are currently under development in Florida, Pennsylvania, Minnesota and Massachusetts.

Hernandez said that Louisiana was targeted as a location for a gasification plant because “it is an industrial state and it has a high utilities cost and high landfill use rates.” Hernandez said the new plant is expected to create more than 100 jobs in the area and produce 115 megawatts of power by processing 2,500 tons of garbage daily. It is expected to be operational by the end of 2012.


Written by: Michelle Blyth

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