Originally published November 15 2005
Engineers design new method of covering and draining landfills
by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, NaturalNews Editor
Timothy Stark, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and Krishna Reddy, a professor of civil engineering at the University of Illinois at Chicago, have proposed using shredded tires to cover landfills.
Timothy Stark, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and Krishna Reddy, a professor of civil engineering at the University of Illinois at Chicago, recently evaluated the use of shredded tires as a drainage material in waste-containment systems.
Shredding tires into chips roughly 4 inches by 6 inches, they report, offers a simple and cost-effective way of providing drainage for modern landfills, remediating older landfills, and disposing of mountains of scrap tires.
Nearly 280 million tires are discarded annually in the United States.
Piles of worn-out tires can become eyesores and breeding grounds for mosquitoes.
In landfills, intact tires can collect methane (produced by decomposing waste) and create potential fire hazards.
Over time, these tires can work their way to the surface, where they can damage liner covers and cause increased leachate production that could contaminate groundwater.
"As a result, many states now require that scrap tires be shredded into chips prior to disposal," Reddy said.
The drainage layer prevents water from percolating through the waste and polluting the ground water, Reddy said.
Stark and Reddy monitored the two sites for such characteristics as settlement, erosion, flow rates and water quality, and compared them with conventional sites that used sand or gravel.
"The tires must be shredded for disposal anyway, so there is fairly little expense compared to buying and hauling sand or gravel."
The remediation of old landfills could consume huge quantities of scrap tires.
"A drainage layer one-foot-thick covering one acre requires about 70,000 tires," Stark said.
"A typical landfill covers 10 to 20 acres, and there are about 150 abandoned landfills in Illinois, alone, that are in need of some degree of remediation."
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