Experimental Characterization of the Thermal, Hydraulic and Mechanical (THM) Properties of Compost Based Landfill Covers

Experimental Characterization of the Thermal, Hydraulic and Mechanical (THM) Properties of Compost Based Landfill Covers

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dc.contributor.author Bajwa, Tariq Mahmood
dc.date.accessioned 2012-01-10T14:05:14Z
dc.date.available 2012-01-10T14:05:14Z
dc.date.created 2012 en_US
dc.date.issued 2012-01-10
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10393/20518
dc.description.abstract Landfills are considered to be one of the major sources of anthropogenic methane (CH4) emissions in the environment. A landfill biocover system optimizes environmental conditions for biotic CH4 consumption that controls the fugitive and residual emissions from landfills. A compost material has more oxidation potential in comparison to any other material due to its high porosity, organic content, free flux for gases and water holding capacity. Thermal, hydraulic, bio – chemical and mechanical (THMCB) properties are important factors that can significantly affect the performance of biocover material with regards to CH4 oxidation potential as well as structural stability. Technical data on the thermal, hydraulic and mechanical (THM) properties of compost based biocover materials are quite limited. Hence, a detailed experimental program has been carried out at the University of Ottawa to study the THM properties and behaviour of compost biocover material by conducting experimental tests on small compost samples as well as by performing column experiments. The test results indicate that lower water content (dry of optimum for compaction curve) shows more free air space (FAS) in comparison to higher water content. The compost has almost the same shear strength for various initial water contents and dry unit weights; however, it settles and swells more at higher water content than lower water content per mechanical test results. The thermal and hydraulic properties of compost are a function of the compaction degree in addition to various other parameters. It is also found that the THM properties of compost are strongly coupled and the degree of saturation greatly affects the FAS. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject Thermal en_US
dc.subject hydraulic en_US
dc.subject mechanical en_US
dc.subject chemical en_US
dc.subject coupled en_US
dc.subject free air space en_US
dc.subject degree of saturation en_US
dc.subject column en_US
dc.title Experimental Characterization of the Thermal, Hydraulic and Mechanical (THM) Properties of Compost Based Landfill Covers en_US
dc.type Thèse / Thesis en_US
dc.faculty.department Génie civil / Civil Engineering en_US
dc.contributor.supervisor Fall, Mamadou
dc.embargo.terms immediate en_US
dc.degree.name MASc en_US
dc.degree.level masters en_US
dc.degree.discipline Génie / Engineering en_US

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