Odors can stem from different sources like industries, waste management facilities, landfills, animal processing units, composting sites and commercial establishments. These odors can be classified into the following 4 types depending on their source:
- Odor released from the organic waste collected from homes, restaurants, gardens and transfer stations
- Odors emanating from municipal solid waste
- Landfill gas odors
- Odors stemming from liquid waste
The Challenging Aspects of Controlling Odor
Foul odor is mainly due to the existence of mercaptans, organic acids and hydrogen sulfide in solid waste. When odors get mixed with wastewater in warmer months it can become problematic. Odors typically show up in rinse water, sludge, collection systems, food processing units and incinerators. Odor is becoming a major issue affecting everything from domestic septic tanks and pet enclosures to urban sewage systems and animal farms. According to a research study, landfill waste odor alone yields over 700,000 results. The challenges arising in odor contamination control can be classified into the following 4 parts:
- Identifying the source
- Capturing the odor to change it
- Absorption of odor in the surrounding environment leading to successful odor control
- Deodorization in case of heightened awareness of the odor is the fourth and the biggest challenge in eliminating odor
7 of the Best Practices for Odor Removal
- Employing Odor Absorbers
Odor absorbers are highly effective in purifying air in industrial and commercial establishments. Odor absorbers such as SMELLEZE natural deodorizer granules eliminate odors by absorbing them instead of simply masking it. These units are efficient at controlling and eliminating odors that are caused due to mildew, chemicals, sewage, decayed organic matter, paints and smoke, and need little maintenance. Odors absorbers can be safely used in industrial units, garbage compactors, manufacturing plants, food storage units, automobiles, disaster areas, boats and dry cleaning facilities. - Covering Powerful Stenches
Implementing a daily cover program is crucial to controlling the spread of unpleasant smell. Soil and similar material can be used for this purpose as it effectively seals odors released from waste. Areas that tend to remain undisturbed for longer time periods till they are completely filled need an intermediate cover. This waste can be covered with a layer of soil that is at least 12 inches deep. Vegetation can be used for the final cover and at intermediate layers while paying close attention to areas for gullies and erosion rills.Leachate breakouts are a strong source of odor and stressed vegetation indicates landfill gas migration. Odor released from both these sources can be efficiently controlled using active gas extraction. A final cover also needs to be installed once the final placement of the waste is completed.
- Active Gas Extraction
Active gas extraction has become the gold standard for controlling landfill odors. It is a highly efficient means when employed with an effective closure plan. When a landfill gets saturated in terms of capacity, vertical extraction of gasses can be employed to control odor. In case of large landfills that remain open for years, a closure may not be possible and this leaves zero scope of active gas extraction. This is when landfill gas odors are produced and to overcome this issue, horizontal trenches need to be excavated for collection of gasses. Modern landfills use active gas extraction to reduce gas odors efficiently. - Identifying Odor Producing Compounds
Depending on your industry type and nature of waste produced, you can consult an expert who is well acquainted with the new waste concepts or send your waste samples to a lab to identify the source of odor and develop a solution that eliminates the root cause. - Converting Landfill Gas into Energy
When organic compounds decompose, methane gas is produced which can be easily collected under vacuum. Methane is a potent greenhouse gas which can be converted to electrical energy. The excess gas that cannot be converted is to be safely destroyed in the form of a high temperature flash. - Using Plant Extracts to Reduce Odors
A specific order of plants belonging to the Zingiberales species is known to have odor reducing properties. Another effective odor reducing composition can be prepared from banana plant extracts that are derived from the Musa genus. Consider using ODOREZE® which is a proven plant based deodorizer specially formulated to eliminate landfill odors. - Deploying a Gas Collection and Control System
A gas collection and control system is designed to maintain negative air pressure to facilitate efficient collection of gasses within the landfill. It is highly effective at preventing any gas leaks. The collected gas can then be used for power generation.The key takeaway in odor control is that landfill sites should release negligible off-site odors and hence the waste management industry must minimize and mitigate the nuisance of unpleasant and hazardous odors. The most efficient way to controlling landfill odors is to identify the source and control it using innovative trash management technology.
Author Bio
Erich Lawson is passionate about saving environment by effective recycling. He has written a wide array of articles on how modern recycling equipments can be used by industries to reduce monthly garbage bills and increase recycling revenue. You can learn more about environment savings techniques by visiting Northern California Compactors, Inc blog
Please send us further details about how to eliminate land fill odors .thanks
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Thank you for all the great information, very informative! I’m attending an open forum of this very same issue this week and am so happy I can get educated beforehand!
We are always happy to help!
Good article. In my experience points 2; 3 and 7 are most common ways to reduce odor. What I would add on point 2 (or make it as separate point) is that LFL Operating Manager together with his team must calculate and preppare minimal active part of landfill. Meaning that on existing LFL OM must use minimal surface for daily operations while other parts should be covered and not used. In some stages of LFL development/building entire, or almost entire area of LFL is used but in later phases there is no need for that but only minimal daily active part of LFL. There is also addendum to building LFL in suc way that you don’t build entire LFL at once but build it at sectors in regards to utilization plan.
Bad odour control
What type of solution available.
How it control, any demo.