Landfill: Difference between revisions

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Putrescible waste placed in landfill sites undergoes decomposition. This is also described in WMP26B. The process gives rise to a liquid known as leachate.  Leachate arises from water entering the waste matter, generally from rainfall on open areas of waste. Leachate is any liquid that, in the course of passing through matter, extracts soluble or suspended solids, or any other component of the material through which it has passed. Landfill leachate is strongly polluting in the external environment; one of the principal reasons for constructing landfill sites as containment facilities is to prevent landfill leachate from escaping from the waste mass in an uncontrolled manner.<br>
Putrescible waste placed in landfill sites undergoes decomposition. This is also described in WMP26B. The process gives rise to a liquid known as leachate.  Leachate arises from water entering the waste matter, generally from rainfall on open areas of waste. Leachate is any liquid that, in the course of passing through matter, extracts soluble or suspended solids, or any other component of the material through which it has passed. Landfill leachate is strongly polluting in the external environment; one of the principal reasons for constructing landfill sites as containment facilities is to prevent landfill leachate from escaping from the waste mass in an uncontrolled manner.<br>
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Once the design of sites moved from dilute and disperse to containment designs, it became necessary to devise means of avoiding leachate from building up excessively within the waste mass. There are two drivers for this: (i) in extreme circumstances, the volumes could lead to levels over-topping the sides of any containment structures and leaving the site, and (ii) designing the site to maintain levels at a level as low as practically possible would improve the HRA outcome for any given design. Consequently, sites were designed with means to collect and remove leachate.<br>
Once the design of sites moved from dilute and disperse to containment designs, it became necessary to devise means of avoiding leachate from building up excessively within the waste mass. There are two drivers for this: (i) in extreme circumstances, the volumes could lead to levels over-topping the sides of any containment structures and leaving the site, and (ii) designing the site to maintain levels at a level as low as practically possible would improve the HRA outcome for any given design. Consequently, sites were designed with means to collect and remove leachate.<br>