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Research Articles
Toxic Oxide Deposits from the Combustion of Landfill Gas and Biogas Dietmar Glindemann; Peter Morgenstern; Rainer Wennrich; Ulrich Stottmeister; Armin Bergmann Corresponding author:: Dr. Dietmar Glindemann, Institute of Animal Hygiene and Veterinary Public Health, Univ. of Leipzig, Semmelweisstr. 4, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany
Oxide deposits found in combustion systems of landfill gas fired power stations contain relatively high concentrations of elements which form volatile species such as P, As, Sb and Sn. The deposits should be handled with care because of their potential toxicity. By contrast, deposits in biogas system engines were found to contain much lower levels of such elements. The enrichment of these elements can be attributed to a hypothetical multistage process. The elements form volatile species in the landfill body. They are selectively transported as part of the landfill gas into the gas-burning devices. Inside the burners, they are immobilized as nonvolatile oxides.
| | Keywords: biogas; deposits; filter dusts; gas combustion; gas engines; inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometer (ICP-AES; organometallic compounds; phosphine; volatile compounds, As, Sb, Sn, Pb, Hg, P; X-ray fluorescence technique (XRF); landfill gas |
3 ESPR (2) 75-77 (1996)
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