000 03981nam a2200253Ia 4500
003 NULRC
005 20250520100610.0
008 250520s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a9781439062159
040 _cNULRC
050 _aTD 791 .W67 2012
100 _aWorrell, William A.
_eauthor
245 0 _aSolid waste engineering /
_cWilliam A. Worrell and P. Aarne Vesilind
250 _aSecond edition.
260 _aAustralia :
_bCengage Learning Asia Pte Ltd,
_cc2012
300 _axxii, 401 pages :
_billustrations ;
_c25 cm.
365 _bUSD153.99
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 _aChapter 1. Integrated Solid Waste Management -- 1-1.Solid Waste in History -- 1-1-1.Economics and Solid Waste -- 1-1-2.Legislation and Regulations -- 1-2.Materials Flow -- 1-2-1.Reduction -- 1-2-2.Reuse -- 1-2-3.Recycling -- 1-2-4.Recovery -- 1-2-5.Disposal of Solid Waste in Landfills -- 1-2-6.Energy Conversion -- 1-3.The Need for Integrated Solid Waste Management -- 1-4.Special Wastes -- 1-5.Final Thoughts -- Problems -- Chapter 2. Municipal Solid Waste Characteristics and Quantities -- 2-1.Definitions -- 2-2.Municipal Solid Waste Generation -- 2-3.Municipal Solid Waste Characteristics -- 2-3-1.Composition by Identifiable Items -- 2-3-2.Moisture Content -- 2-3-3.Particle Size -- 2-3-4.Chemical Composition -- 2-3-5.Heat Value -- 2-3-6.Bulk and Material Density -- 2-3-7.Mechanical Properties -- 2-3-8.Biodegradability -- 2-4.Final Thoughts -- 2-5.Appendix Measuring Particle Size -- Problems -- Chapter 3. Collection -- 3-1.Refuse Collection Systems -- 3-1-1.Phase 1: House to Can -- 3-1-2.Phase 2: Can to Truck -- 3-1-3.Phase 3: Truck from House to House -- 3-1-4.Phase 4: Truck Routing -- 3-1-5.Phase 5: Truck to Disposal -- 3-2.Commercial Wastes -- 3-3.Transfer Stations -- 3-4.Collection of Recyclable Materials -- 3-5.Litter and Street Cleanliness -- 3-6.Final Thoughts -- 3-7.Appendix Design of Collection Systems -- Problems -- Chapter 4. Landfills -- 4-1.Planning, Siting, and Permitting of Landfills -- 4-1-1.Planning -- 4-1-2.Siting -- 4-1-3.Permitting -- 4-2.Landfill Processes -- 4-2-1.Biological Degradation -- 4-2-2.Leachate Production -- 4-2-3.Gas Production -- 4-3.Landfill Design -- 4-3-1.Liners -- 4-3-2.Leachate Collection, Treatment, and Disposal -- 4-3-3.Landfill Gas Collection and Use -- 4-3-4.Geotechnical Aspects of Landfill Design -- 4-3-5.Stormwater Management -- 4-3-6.Landfill Cap -- 4-4.Landfill Operations -- 4-4-1.Landfill Equipment -- 4-4-2.Filling Sequences -- 4-4-3.Daily Cover -- 4-4-4.Monitoring -- 4-5.Post-closure Care an.
520 _aAs with the first edition, this book is written for the engineering student who wants to learn about solid waste engineering, a subset of environmental engineering. Environmental engineering developed during the last 60 years as a major engineering discipline and is now established as an equal alongside such major engineering fields as civil, chemical, mechanical, and electrical engineering. The emergence of environmental engineering is driven in great part by societal need to control the pollution of our environment. Jobs for environmental engineers continue to increase, and there is no sign that this will slow down. Using this book as part of a graduate or advanced undergraduate course in solid waste engineering will help to prepare the student to enter the field as an engineer-in-training. Much of the knowledge in solid waste engineering is gained by actual experience while working with experienced engineers in the field, and it is impossible to include all of this experience in this book. What we hope is that the student, at the conclusion of this course, will be able to enter into meaningful conversations with experienced engineers and eventually put the basic principles learned in this course to beneficial use.
650 _aREFUSE AND REFUSE DISPOSAL -- TEXTBOOKS
700 _aVesilind, P. Aarne
_eco-author
942 _2lcc
_cBK
999 _c9098
_d9098