View : 905 Download: 0

Seasonal characteristics of odor and methane mitigation and the bacterial community dynamics in an on-site biocover at a sanitary landfill

Title
Seasonal characteristics of odor and methane mitigation and the bacterial community dynamics in an on-site biocover at a sanitary landfill
Authors
Lee, Yun-YeongJung, HyekyengRyu, Hee-WookOh, Kyung-CheolJeon, Jun-MinCho, Kyung-Suk
Ewha Authors
조경숙
SCOPUS Author ID
조경숙scopus
Issue Date
2018
Journal Title
WASTE MANAGEMENT
ISSN
0956-053XJCR Link
Citation
WASTE MANAGEMENT vol. 71, pp. 277 - 286
Keywords
On-site biocoverOdor removalMethane removalLandfillsBacterial community structure
Publisher
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Landfills are key anthropogenic emission sources for odors and methane. For simultaneous mitigation of odors and methane emitted from landfills, a pilot-scale biocover (soil:perlite:earthworm cast:compost, 6:2:1:1, v/v) was constructed at a sanitary landfill in South Korea, and the biocover performance and its bacterial community dynamics were monitored for 240 days. The removal efficiencies of odor and methane were evaluated to compare the odor dilution ratios or methane concentrations at the biocover surface and landfill soil cover surface where the biocover was not installed. The odor removal efficiency was maintained above 85% in all seasons. The odor dilution ratios ranged from 300 to 3000 at the biocover surface, but they were 6694-20,801 at the landfill soil cover surface. Additionally, the methane removal efficiency was influenced by the ambient temperature; the methane removal efficiency in winter was 35-43%, while the methane removability was enhanced to 85%, 86%, and 96% in spring, early summer, and late summer, respectively. The ratio of methanotrophs to total bacterial community increased with increasing ambient temperature from 5.4% (in winter) to 12.8-14.8% (in summer). In winter, non-methanotrophs, such as Acinetobacter (8.8%), Rhodanobacter (7.5%), Pedobacter (7.5%), and Arthrobacter (5.7%), were abundant. However, in late summer, Methylobacter (8.8%), Methylocaldum (3.4%), Mycobacterium (1.1%), and Desuiviicoccus (0.9%) were the dominant bacteria. Methylobacter was the dominant methanotroph in all seasons. These seasonal characteristics of the on-site biocover performance and its bacterial community are useful for designing a full-scale biocover for the simultaneous mitigation of odors and methane at landfills. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
DOI
10.1016/j.wasman.2017.10.037
Appears in Collections:
공과대학 > 환경공학과 > Journal papers
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML


qrcode

BROWSE