Process Overview
The organic waste in landfills is covered and compressed by heavy equipment to create an anaerobic condition, a biological decomposition process that does not involve oxygen and breaks down organic matter. HOFFMAN & LAMSON blowers extract the byproducts from the anaerobic digestion process. Vacuum is applied to a perforated piping system to control and withdraw the resulting gas. Primarily comprised of 50%-70% methane (CH4) and 25%-50% carbon dioxide (CO2), this gas is both hazardous and potentially useful. If the gas remains in the landfill, then explosions can occur. If leaked into the atmosphere, it contributes to smog as a hazardous gas known as volatile organic compounds (VOC).
Landfills in the United States must estimate the quantity of non-methane organic compounds emitted to the atmosphere. If these landfill emissions exceed 50 tons per year, then they are required to contain and clean the gas to remove the non-methane organic compounds. Usually, the methane gas is burned off or flared, which requires a vacuum producer and compressor to remove gas from the ground and feed into the flare.