Kent Harrington
Kent is a videographer and professional storyteller. He regularly blogs for AIChE on ChEnected. See his latest posts below. You can also follow Kent on twitter @harringtonkent.

As America's dump-truck-accessible landfill spaces fill to the brim with garbage, where did Waste Management Inc, the nation's $12.5 billion trash hauling king, go to solve this problem? In 2009, along with buying stakes in eight other companies that gasify, ferment, or digest trash, the company found its way to Jeff Surma, a 52-year-old chemical engineer with a unique solution verging on 60s science fiction: a plasma-enhanced melter technology. Since last November, some of the 35,000 tons of household trash arriving by dump truck at Waste Management's Columbia Ridge landfill in Arlington, Oregon, are diverted to a building that looks like a cavernous Home Depot. Attached to it is Surma's unique plasma gasification plant. It's the first commercial plant in the US to use plasma gasification to convert municipal household garbage into gas products like hydrogen and carbon monoxide, which

can later be burned as fuel. Using plasma for processing waste had been around forever, primarily in the metal and chemical industries. Oil refineries, for example, spend about $2,000 a ton to eliminate toxic sludge with plasma gasification. (One of the first plants sold by Surma's company helps Dow Corning dispose of 20 tons of hazardous waste a day.)
Solving the toxic waste problem
Surma's three-step process
Each day, in the huge receiving depot, waste is delivered by truck and then shredded into pieces about six inches long. It travels by conveyer belt to the top of a large tank, where it falls into a gasifier heated to

1,500 F, vaporizing 75 to 85% of the waste quickly into syngas that is piped out of the system. In the second phase of Surma's process, any remaining substances (still chemically intact) drop into a vessel about the size of a huge industrial-sized pot. Inside, where an intense 18,000-degree electric arc running between two electrodes creates a plasma zone, almost all the remaining trash gets blasted into its atomic elements. This emission-free molecular deconstruction is even more efficient because the blasted materials have already been partially heated. Afterwards, the final gases are piped out to be processed. Finally, a joule-heated melter sits directly beneath the plasma zone, where a molten glass bath

traps the remaining hazardous material dropping down into a molten goop flowing in a slow ooze of glass and liquefied metal out of the bottom. Once inert and harmless, it is converted into low-value materials such as road aggregate. Ensuring that the process remains economical, syngas piped out of the plant is used to supply all of the power needed to run the melter. Any remaining syngas - mostly carbon monoxide and hydrogen - is cleaned and sold. Here is an early InEntec video that visualizes the final two steps of the process:
Will Waste Management change the energy business?
Images: Plasma Ball, Ana Carol Mendes; others, InEnTec
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