The Complexity of Material Cycle Simulation and Design ù Co-Incineration

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
G P. J Dijkema M A. Reuter
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
6
File Size:
1148 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2000

Abstract

From a material cycles perspective all processes are interconnected and consequently a process can never be evaluated as an isolated and independent unit. This also holds true for the evaluated co-incineration options. Environmental and sustainability issues for example, such as raw material and energy utilisation or air pollution, are a resultant of the whole system of industrial activities. It is therefore important, not to optimise a single process or industrial activity, but rather the whole system. Although engineering procedures for the design of individual industrial units are well developed, the problem of determining the best arrangement of these interconnected units is often far more difficult. Regulation that manages the arrangement of the units for waste processing is still under construction. In the evaluation of co-incineration, analogous principle from process control can be used: feedforward control. This principle includes the determination of which outlets can be used for all process outputs, hence avoidance of any æunusableÆ products or wastes possibly arising from co-incineration. To establish the extent, to which produced wastes are usable, a system overview is necessary, in addition to in-depth information on the subsystems, which produce and can consume wastes. Material cycles modelling can be used as the basis for a tool that supports the development of a suitable playing field. It should provide overview of the system and in-depth information on its subsystems. This tool then represents an attempt to bridge the gap between æholisticÆ industrial ecology and process engineering.
Citation

APA: G P. J Dijkema M A. Reuter  (2000)  The Complexity of Material Cycle Simulation and Design ù Co-Incineration

MLA: G P. J Dijkema M A. Reuter The Complexity of Material Cycle Simulation and Design ù Co-Incineration. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2000.

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