I typically shy away from a lot of stuff published in Popular Science, but this article really struck me as very cool.http://www.popsci.com/popsci/science/873aae7bf86c0110vgnvcm1000004eecbccdrcrd.htmlBasically a large trash compactor with a plasma beam in the middle. Feed the trash in, plasma utterly annihilates it. The only byproducts are excess electricity, a jar of hydrogen, and some sort of black rock.
2/27/2007 1:00:45 AM
Similar processors have been invented over the last 10 years, all promising to use waste as an energy source. The concept is sound, but the economics never seem to work out for these companies.The problem comes when they realize that they have to pay for the waste in some form or another. Everybody assumes that trash is free, but they don't factor in the handling fees, etc. Maybe one of these things could work with government subsidies, but I wouldn't bank on it and I wouldn't expect other taxpayers to, either. Syngas isn't exactly the cleanest or easiest fuel source, either. You can produce syngas a lot cheaper from coal than you can from trash, I bet.[Edited on February 27, 2007 at 3:39 AM. Reason : 2]
2/27/2007 3:38:21 AM
2/27/2007 7:17:04 AM
there is one operating somewhere in the Netherlands, but from what I remember the process results in some very nasty exhaust fumes. tehn again, I think they were using a basic incinerator and not an arc furnace.
2/27/2007 12:42:12 PM
2/27/2007 12:59:42 PM
it would be a good facility idea for those already operating dumps and such.... they already charge to get the trash, this way they can make more money with something they have already been paid to take...
2/27/2007 1:02:34 PM
after looking up some information on wikipedia, it looks like these newer plants have higher emissions than natural gas plants, but less than coal. the old plants were bad about pumping out dioxin and furan.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incineration#Pollution[Edited on February 27, 2007 at 1:26 PM. Reason : fly ash pits are fucking disgusting too.]
2/27/2007 1:24:17 PM
That entire wikipedia article is talking about incineration, not plasma. Yes, I realize that plasma is incinerating, but that is not the subject matter of the wiki.Did you not see this line
2/27/2007 1:32:27 PM
Awful article. I'm in the landfill building business, and here's a real breakdown: Economically, this doesn't even come close to being cheap compared to landfills.
2/27/2007 2:21:29 PM
I don't believe it. Someone in the landfill business that isn't in favor of this machine. Shocking.You didn't really articulate how this statement is...wrong? or a lie or whatever.
2/27/2007 2:35:51 PM
Universal Assemblers FTW.
2/27/2007 2:39:08 PM
I don't believe it. Someone in the landfill business that isn't in favor of this machine. Shocking.
2/27/2007 2:49:45 PM
^^^ I'm not in the landfill business. I'm in the solid waste business...so I do design them. Big difference....basically no bias.We do feasibility studies for alternatives all the time for major municipalities, including Wake County.
2/27/2007 2:51:05 PM
2/27/2007 3:02:54 PM
2/27/2007 3:05:38 PM
^^^
2/27/2007 3:10:24 PM
2/27/2007 3:20:27 PM
2/27/2007 3:26:19 PM
[QUOTE]"I'm in the landfill building business" Quote : "I'm not in the landfill business. I'm in the solid waste business..." [/QUOTE]Are you implying that these two quotes of mine are the same windhound?
2/27/2007 3:30:55 PM
What part of "it's not ash" don't you understand?
2/27/2007 3:40:03 PM
i think recycling is the key, if you start with this plasma gizmo we'll end up turning our resources into weird chemicals which will haunt us in the future,the plain fact of the matter is that nothing is free, and when we use materials and we produce waste the cost of dealing with the waste is time, time to decompose and go back into the circle of lifeall ideas are copyright of lafta industries 2007
2/27/2007 3:42:34 PM
2/27/2007 3:43:43 PM
does this count as renewable energy, since we keep making trash all the time?
2/27/2007 4:07:13 PM
our society is just too wasteful and too impatient, were are headed to doom, instead of trying to invent technology to aid us in our wastefullness and recklessness why not make advancements in how we live, that is the real source of our problems[Edited on February 27, 2007 at 4:13 PM. Reason : All ideas are copyright by Lafta industries 2007]
2/27/2007 4:12:29 PM
^^^ It's worth trying. I'd love to find something that gets rid of the use of landfills. But the economics simply aren't there.In your example, with St. Lucie, GeoPlasma had to pay for the whole deal. Isn't that telling?[Edited on February 27, 2007 at 4:12 PM. Reason : ^^^]
2/27/2007 4:12:31 PM
2/27/2007 4:16:59 PM
Which is total crap because modern landfills have no chance to contaminate groundwater, in theory.But yeah, I am concerned about that "mysterious" obsidian glass.
2/27/2007 4:23:28 PM
^There is something in the article that talks about getting diseases (hepatitis A & B) from landfills contaminating something, possibly groundwater in noob countries.
2/27/2007 4:30:28 PM
2/27/2007 4:34:51 PM
2/27/2007 4:46:31 PM
2/27/2007 4:55:17 PM
2/27/2007 4:56:25 PM
2/27/2007 4:58:43 PM
Geoplasma ponying up the money for the plant probably means that they are somehow qualifying for federal green power grant money. are they going to be majority-shareholders of the plant afterwards? wind farm builders have being doing just that for years.
2/27/2007 5:05:44 PM
2/27/2007 5:09:04 PM
so that's what ~50 years before its just about pure profit just based on landfill costs alone? (not to mention the electricity produced)
2/27/2007 5:14:30 PM
http://www.acaa-usa.org/PDF/2004_CCP_Survey(9-9-05).pdf
2/27/2007 5:15:58 PM
You aren't making sense. Is ash safe or not?First you said it was a hazardous material
2/27/2007 5:28:01 PM
Hey, remember that processor that promised to produce oil from trash? They had lots of break-even numbers and rosy economic estimates just like this plasma converter. It didn't work out, primarily because every estimate they generated was based on best-case scenarios, and they forgot to factor in a lot of costs. I would imagine that this Plasma Converter suffers from similar crooked numbers.
2/27/2007 5:41:53 PM
there is a lot of debate about whether ash is safe or not. the only people claiming that ash is safe are coal burning facilities that just want to get rid of the shit, but their lobbying power makes their arguments get heard loudly. for that reason, disposal requirements and approved commercial uses have changed in recent years. even still, fly ash is kept in concrete pools under wet conditions at all times while it is on the power plant site, and it is supposed to be kept in pools after it is transported to landfills. it is only in the last several years that fly ash has been approved for use in construction purposes.keep in mind that 25 years ago we didn't even bother to install scrubbers and just let the shit fly out into the atmosphere.honestly, I don't know how they can claim something to be dangerous one year and then put it in every aspect surrounding new home construction the next.
2/27/2007 5:47:13 PM
Black rock?Ok I'm going to go read the article now
2/27/2007 11:35:43 PM