Estimating Energy Potential from Medical Waste Incinerator Heat?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion focuses on estimating the energy potential from the heat generated by incinerating medical waste. Participants explore various approaches to quantify this energy, considering the composition of the waste and its treatment process.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant suggests using the temperature of the exhaust and the composition of the waste to make a gross estimate of energy potential, indicating that assuming it is just heated air may provide a conservative estimate.
  • Another participant expresses interest in quantifying energy derived from a specific quantity of medical waste to evaluate its feasibility for electricity generation or heating.
  • Concerns are raised about the composition of the medical waste, noting that plastics could lead to pollution issues and potential corrosion in incineration equipment.
  • A participant provides specific calorific values for unsorted soft clinical waste in the UK, citing a range of 23,000 - 31,000 J/g, which translates to about 23-31 MJ/kg.
  • Further details are shared about the composition of clinical waste, highlighting the presence of plastics, paper, and cotton fibers, and noting that the waste is typically autoclaved to reduce moisture content before incineration.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express varying views on the best methods for estimating energy potential, and while some technical details are shared, there is no consensus on a single approach or methodology.

Contextual Notes

The discussion acknowledges the variability in clinical waste composition based on different healthcare activities and geographical factors, which may affect energy estimates.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to professionals in waste management, environmental science, and energy production, particularly those focused on medical waste incineration and energy recovery.

job2oo5
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Dear All,

What is the best approach to estimating energy from incinerator waste heat?

Note that it is medical waste being incinerated.


Thank you so much.
 
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You could make a gross estimate using the temperature of the exhaust and some knowledge of the makeup of it (mostly air with less O2 and more CO2 and CO, little carbon). Assuming it was just heated air would probably be a conservative estimate.
 
Hello,

How can I use the temperature? My interest is to estimate how much energy can be derived from a given quantity of medical waste, then decide whether the quantity is attractive to generate electricity out of it or consider heating.

Thank you so much.
 
What is your medical waste made up of? If it includes plastics you might find that you have pollution problems, you also may have problems with corrosion on boiler tubes if your waste contains sulpher or other chemicals.
 
It is a mixture, as u might be aware of the kind of waste from health care units. I think emissions in incineration cannot be completely eliminated although can be greatly reduced by design.
 
Unsorted soft clinical (medical) waste produced in the UK, first treated by autoclave to remove any risk of infection and then shredded to homogenise has a typical calorific value of 23,000 - 31,000 J/g

Ian Blenkharn
Blenkharn Environmental
 
This is significant energy value: about 23-31MJ/kg!
 
Remember, this waste has been autoclaved first so bulk liquid waste has been removed and the residual moisture content is no more that 20%

Clinical waste composition varies. It varies depending on the nature of clinical activities, ie medical or surgical, acute or chronic care, and with the country of origin that will affect the use of single-use disposable items.

The bulk of waste, in the UK, comprises plastic. There is much hard plastic from medical devices and syringes, PVC from IV tubing etc, and non-woven polyprop from gowns and drapes. The remaining waste is high in paper and cotton fibres.

The data I quote from obtained as the average of samples from a UK clinical waste treatment facility receiving waste from many UK acute hospitals, and tested in a UKAS accredited laboratory.

Ian
 
Great Ian.
 

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