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Air and landfill gas movement through passive gas vents installed in closed landfills
Authors:Hee-Jong Kim  Hideki Yoshida  Toshihiko Matsuto  Yasumasa Tojo  Takayuki Matsuo
Affiliation:1. MOE Key Laboratory of Soft Soils and Geoenvironmental Engineering, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, China;2. Institute of Hydrology and Water Resources Engineering, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310058, China;1. Department of Civil Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, Kanpur 208016, India;2. LTHE, University Joseph Fourier 1, Grenoble F 38041, France;3. Department of Civil Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, Mumbai 400076, India
Abstract:In a closed landfill, Japan, remedial actions have been undertaken to address the inadequate leachate collection and drainage systems. Part of this process included installing many passive gas vents in the landfill to promote stabilization of landfilled waste. This study focused on the gas velocity in vents by conducting tracer tests to elucidate the gas flow via passive gas vents. The gas composition and gas temperature in the vents was also measured.As the gas vents pass through the waste layer, both landfill gas and air flows through the vents. Therefore, passive gas vents can be used to aerate landfilled waste as well as to collect and release landfill gas. Aerobic biodegradation occurs when air migrates through the waste layer if organic matter is present; this increases the temperature of the waste layer. Inflow of air into the gas vents can occur at a wide range of depths, even 10–20 m below ground level. Air is induced not from the surface of the landfill, but horizontally along the waste layer. The driving force of air induction from outside is a buoyancy effect caused by the temperature rise due to aerobic biodegradation.
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