During their production, management, and landfilling, bottom (BA) and fly (FA) ashes from municipal solid waste incineration may liberate Fe-bearing, ultrafine particles and easily enter different environmental sinks of the biosphere. We aim to explore a collection of BA and FA samples from Italian incinerators to probe magnetic mineralogy and the fraction of harmful superparamagnetic (SP) nanoparticles (d < 30 nm). X-ray diffraction, electron microscopy observation, temperature-and frequency-dependent magnetometry, and Mossbauer analysis are performed. The integration of information fromour rockmagnetic and non-magnetic techniques leads us to conclude that the dominant magnetic carrier in our samples is magnetite and its intermediate/impure forms, while sulphides (i.e., monoclinic pyrrhotite) are important ancillary magnetic phases. The SP fraction fluxing from the BA and FA outputs of a single incinerator is detected and estimated in 10(3) tons/year. This work stresses the need to calibrate the current technologies towards a safermanagement of combustion ashes and certainly to inform the environmental impact assessment by using a combination of different methods. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Superparamagnetic iron oxides nanoparticles from municipal solid waste incinerators

Funari V;Mantovani L;Vigliotti L;
2018

Abstract

During their production, management, and landfilling, bottom (BA) and fly (FA) ashes from municipal solid waste incineration may liberate Fe-bearing, ultrafine particles and easily enter different environmental sinks of the biosphere. We aim to explore a collection of BA and FA samples from Italian incinerators to probe magnetic mineralogy and the fraction of harmful superparamagnetic (SP) nanoparticles (d < 30 nm). X-ray diffraction, electron microscopy observation, temperature-and frequency-dependent magnetometry, and Mossbauer analysis are performed. The integration of information fromour rockmagnetic and non-magnetic techniques leads us to conclude that the dominant magnetic carrier in our samples is magnetite and its intermediate/impure forms, while sulphides (i.e., monoclinic pyrrhotite) are important ancillary magnetic phases. The SP fraction fluxing from the BA and FA outputs of a single incinerator is detected and estimated in 10(3) tons/year. This work stresses the need to calibrate the current technologies towards a safermanagement of combustion ashes and certainly to inform the environmental impact assessment by using a combination of different methods. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
2018
Istituto di Scienze Marine - ISMAR
Anthropogenic pollution
Fly ash and bottom ash
Iron oxides
Magnetic susceptibility
Municipal solid waste incineration (MSWI)
Superparamagnetic (SP) particles
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/372168
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