Title: KKA 4106 Toxic and Hazardous Waste Engineering Lecture 1
1 KKA 4106 Toxic and Hazardous Waste
EngineeringLecture 1
- Dr Robiah Yunus
- Dept. of Chemical and Environmental Eng.
- Universiti Putra Malaysia
2KEY QUESTIONS
- What are those things in the wastes that are
hazardous? - Why are they hazardous?
- In what quantities or concentrations are they
hazardous? - Where do they come from?
- Where do they go?
- How can they properly be treated?
- Can they be disposed of?
3Stop illegal Dumping of Hazardous Wastes
Be suspicious of any dumping of drums,
HDPE/plastic containers or sacks containing
foul-adored, colored or reactive liquid or
sludge.
4Stop illegal Dumping of Hazardous Wastes
Ensure that your neighborhood or surrounding is
not a dumping ground for hazardous waste.
5What Should You Do?
- Note down the vehicle registration number
- Snap a photo of the incident
- Contact the Department of Environment (Tel
03-8889 1972 / 03-8885 8265)
6DEFINITION
- Waste
- unwanted material will be discarded permanently
- Toxic Waste
- Waste material, often in chemical form, that can
cause death or injury to living creatures when
improperly managed - Produced during industrial, chemical and
biological processes - Household, office and commercial wastes also
contain small quantities of toxic wastes (e.g.
batteries, old pesticides containers) - Comes in a variety of forms, thus require
specific treatment - Often used interchangeably with hazardous waste
7DEFINITION
- Hazardous Waste
- Wastes include solids, sludge, liquids, and
containerized gases, except radioactive and
infectious wastes, due to their chemical activity
(reactivity) or toxicity, explosive, corrosive,
or other characteristics, cause danger to health
or environment, whether stand alone or in contact
with other wastes - U.S. environmental protection agency (EPA)
regulates hazardous waste as a subset of solid
waste.
8HAZARDOUS WASTE
- Two different groups
- Hazardous substance has some commercial value
because usable - Hazardous wastes has been used, spilled or is
no longer needed. - EPA under Subtitle C declared that waste consider
hazardous if - Waste is declared hazardous by generators
- Material exhibit characteristics ignitable,
corrosive, reactive, or toxic - Specially listed by EPA
9HISTORY
- Term hazardous waste was accepted since 1970s.
- In 1976, US initiated legislation to regulate
hazardous waste. - Long before, term hazardous waste was not
existed. Referred as special industrial waste
or chemical waste. - US EPA took ? 4 yrs from the 1st nations
hazardous waste law before announcing regulations
to public. - Define waste (prepared by a joint international
study) as a moveable object which has no direct
use, unwanted material and is discarded
permanently. Also implies to solid waste.
10HISTORY
- Early 1980s, hazardous waste became leading
environmental issue to the society. - 21st Century, many scientific information on
problems with global ecosystem, also high amount
of federal money spent for environmental program. - Hazardous waste dominates environmental issues
public concern on toxic reaction. - Problem started long before. Many wealthy Romans
suffered from lead poisoning (2 millennia ago).
11HISTORY
- Advances on medical sciences and public health
reduced death rate, thus human population
increase. - Personal consumption grew rapidly as expanding
industrial production then hazardous waste
problem grew in tandem. - Earlier, no government policies that require
appropriate precautions on handling wastes.
Typical rule, simply disposing to environment. - Nature of toxic hazardous substances show long
term effect after exposure. - When cases exist, government initiates policies
on handling the wastes.
12LANDMARK EPISODS
- MERCURY (1960s)
- Different toxicological properties depending on
its chemical state. - Liquid-metal form once used to cure
constipation with few adverse side effects. - Mercury-salts used to form felt (Dutch-hat
industry) led to neurological disorder workers
termed as mad as hatter. - Organic form not easily noticeable but cause
paralysis and sensory loss. e.g. discharged from
chemical plant to Minamata Bay, Japan (1960s),
bioaccumulated in shellfish. - Global awareness on industrial pollution exists
when many cases appear with similar symptom at a
very short period of time.
13LANDMARK EPISODS
- DDT (1962)
- DDT residues in deep-sea squid, Antarctic
penguins and fatty tissue of Homo sapiens. - Penguins lack of fertility due to thinning egg
shells - Homo sapiens insidious disease cause serious
harm and associated with increased frequency of
cancer. - PCB PBB (1960s 1970s)
- 100 million pounds pf PCBs was produced annually.
2 accidental contamination cases of rice cooking
oil in Japan Taiwan led to miscarriages and
birth defects. - Same time in Michigan, USA, contamination
occurred on cows that was fed by PBBs. Widespread
human exposure.
14LOVE CANAL
- Symbol of environmental contamination by
hazardous waste. A passage Superfund Act
(Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation Liability Act, CERCLA) in 1980 was
created by US Congress. - Used as hazardous waste disposal site in 1940s
50s, then, filled and covered, and sold to
Niagara Falls, New York School District for
1.00. Built elementary school led to hundreds of
homes built around that area. Late 1970s, smelly
chemical odor especially at basement. - Chemical analysis found out that many chemical
substances existed at disposal sites including
dioxin. - A local reporter (Micheal Brown Niagara Gazette)
experienced the smell and chemical fumes which
led to nausea and teary eyes around basement and
reported, then, EPA took action. His report won
Pulitzer Prize.
15WOBURN
- Municipal wells G H were installed in 1964
1967, operated by city of Woburn, Massachusetts. - 1979, the wells were shut down. Soon after,
residents complained on foul water, however, no
feedback from the state. - More than 10 yrs using wells , the state
confirmed the wells were contaminated by organic
solvents. At this area, health problems inc.
leukemia and cardiac arrhythmia were high. - In 1982, a lawsuit was filed on behalf of 6
families against 2 companies, low settlement. - EPA conducted its own studies, and in 1990,
settlement 69.45 million was negotiated with
many more companies involved.
16LANDMARK EPISODS
- TIMES BEACH
- late 1960s and early 1970s, wastes from chemical
plant (St. Louis, Missouri) were taken and
diluted with used crankcase oil, sprayed on dirt
road and horse farm to control dust. - In May 1971, many animals died, even after 6 in.
of topsoil was removed, still many died. Chemical
analysis - found out dioxin contamination ? 100
ppm. - PHENOL LEAKAGE
- In June 2001, an Indonesian-registered Endah
Lestari was capsized, 2 km off Johor Coast,
carried gt 600 tonnes of liquid chemical phenol,
contaminate large area. - Immediate after the incident, hundreds of fish
died. 2 km radius was banned from fishing and
swimming.
17BHOPAL TRAGEDY
- Union Carbide started as a carbon company in 1886
and then diversified to gases and chemical during
WWI. - Since WWII, Manhattan Project was a contractor to
US Federal Government until the contract was
terminated in 1984. - May 1982, Safety Audit reported 61 hazards cases,
50 major and 11 occurred at methyl isocyanides
unit (MIC). - Immediate after MIC leakage, 8000 people died.
After 14 yrs, death toll rose to gt 16,000. Now, gt
10 people are dying every month from exposure
related diseases.
18GENERATION OF HAZARDOUS WASTES
- Originate from a range of industrial, commercial,
households, agricultural and institutional
activities and from both manufacturing and
non-manufacturing facilities and processes. - After generated, generator can manage the waste
on-site or off-site for treatment, disposal
or recycling. - On-Site waste is managed at a site where it
is generated - Off-Site waste is managed at different site
- US place responsibility for proper disposal to
the waste generator Generator Standard
regulation at 40 CFR 262, and EPA monitors
generator activities by assigning an EPA
identification number to each generator, each
hauler and each treatment, storage and disposal
facility.
19GENERATOR RESPONSIBILITY
- Indicate whether their waste generated are
hazardous or not and manage them, listed at 40
CFR 261.20 261.24 - EPA defines generators as follows
- Large-quantity generators facilities producing
gt 1000 kg of hazardous waste/month or gt 1 kg of
acute hazardous waste/month. - Small-quantity generators facilities producing
between 100 kg lt hazardous waste lt 1000 kg
monthly, and accumulating lt 6000 kg at any time. - Conditionally exempt small-quantity generators
facilities producing lt 100 kg of hazardous
waste/month or lt 1kg of acute hazardous
waste/month. - This requirement limit to facilitys waste
accumulation to lt 1000 kg of hazardous waste, 1kg
of acute hazardous waste, or 100 kg of any
residue from the clean-up of a spill of acutely
hazardous waste at any time.
20TOXIC WASTE
- The characteristics of toxic waste
- Poisonous
- Radioactive
- Flammable
- Explosive
- Corrosive
- Carcinogenic
- Mutagenic
- Teratogenic
- Bioaccumulative
- Toxic waste includes substances that harmful to
life and environment.
21TOXIC WASTE
- Toxic or poisonous wastes produced during
industrial, chemical or biological processes. - Examples of toxic wastes
- PCB polychlorinated biphenyls nonflammable
insulating material used by big electrical
networks such as Eskom. - Dioxins produced by burning chlorine-containing
substances. - Heavy metals wide used in cadmium and nickel
plating industries. Also found in batteries and
leaded gasoline. - Radioactive waste by product from nuclear power
generation. Also found in medicine such as in
cancer therapy.
22IDENTIFICATION OF HAZARDOUS WASTE
- To class any material as hazardous waste, the
material itself must be considered as waste and
meet one of the following criteria - Show any characteristics of hazardous waste
- Named and listed as hazardous waste by EPA
- A mixture containing a listed hazardous waste and
a - nonhazardous solid waste
- A mixture containing a listed or characteristics
hazardous - waste and special nuclear material,
- A waste residue generated from treatment, storage
or disposal of a listed hazardous waste called
derived-from waste.
23CHARACTERISTICS OF HAZARDOUS WASTE
- The characteristics of wastes when exhibit
measurable properties and pose enough threat to
deserve regulation as hazardous waste. - US EPA decided that to show they are hazardous,
use standardized test method or the properties of
waste meet the standard requirement. - By these, EPA already set 4 characteristics of
hazardous waste. - Ignitability Reactivity
- Corrosibility Toxicity
24IGNITABILITY
- Easily combustible or flammable and may cause
fires during transport, storage or disposal.
Examples include solvents, paint wastes and
gasoline. EPA classified this type at 40 CFR
261.21. Any waste as follows are coded D001 - A liquid, except aqueous solution, containing lt
24 alcohol and flash point lt 60oC - Non liquid that capable of having spontaneous
combustion at normal condition - An ignitable compressed gas, defined by US DOT.
- An oxidizer, defined by US DOT.
25CORROSIVITY
- React dangerously with other waste, dissolve or
corrodes metal or other material or has a high or
low pH. - Listed at 40 CFR 261.22, and any wastes as
follows are coded D002 - An aqueous material with pH ?2 or 12.5
- Liquid that corrodes steel with fast rate, gt 0.25
in./yr at 55oC
26REACTIVITY
- Unstable and have a rapid chemical reaction with
water or other material, e.g. cyanide plating
wastes. - Listed at 40 CFR 261.23. Waste is unstable and
reacts violently without detonating, reacts
violently with water that cause fire splash, form
explosive mixture with water, generate toxic
gases when mix with water, contain cyanide or
sulfide, and - pH ?2 or 12.5, are coded as D003.
27TOXICITY
- Harmful or fatal when ingested or absorbed or
leached toxic chemical into soil or groundwater
when disposed of. - Listed at 40 CFR 261.24. To know the wastes are
listed under toxicity characteristics, EPA
regulated a standard method called Toxicity
Characteristics Leaching Procedure. - Any materials contain greater than regulatory
levels, are coded as listed wastes.
28OTHER CHARACTERISTICS
- For example medical waste which may be
infectious, used bandages, hypodermic needles,
human tissue or blood, must be handled and
disposed of according to specific EPA guidelines.
29LISTED WASTE
- Special waste that come from generic industrial
processes, from certain sectors of industry, and
unused pure chemical product and formulation. - US EPA classified 4 different criteria to listed
waste. - Non specific source waste produced by
industrial processes. Grouped as F waste and
listed at 40 CFR 261.31. - Specific source waste generated from
specifically identified industries, such as
petroleum refining, wood preserving. Known as K
waste and listed at 40 CFR 261.32. - Commercial chemical products consist of
specific commercial chemical products or
manufacturing chemical intermediates. Known as
P waste and U waste and listed at 40 CFR
261.33. These wastes are regulated as hazardous
waste when discarded in pure form, includes
off-spec species, spill residues. If blended,
evaluate under different group
30WASTE MIXTURE
- Any waste mixture that contains a listed
hazardous waste and non-hazardous waste is
considered hazardous wastes. - EPA set a Mixture Rule.