Understanding room-temperature magnetic properties of anthropogenic ashes from municipal solid waste incineration to assess potential impacts and resources
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2020
Abstract:
Environmental magnetic studies are widely used to trace sources of anthropogenic pollution and have
revealed promising applications to the urban waste management system. Here, a collection of solid
samples from Municipal Solid Waste Incinerators (MSWI) were studied to probe the capability of
geochemical and magnetic data integration as a tool for assessing mineralogy, grain-size, and metal
enrichment. A data set of room-temperature magnetic parameters was compared with chemical data by
X-ray fluorescence and electron microscopy observations. The aim was to validate or reject methods for
urban mining purposes, testing and exploiting the correlations that magnetic properties typically
experience with iron and heavy metals, as well as their relation to magnetic grain-sizes (from mm-scale
down below 30 nm). We noted that the room-temperature magnetic data of MSWI ashes, used to assess
grain-size according to the magnetic domain states, is complicated by the clumping of tiny and large
grains displaying similar magnetic properties, so it needs to be supported by optical methods or more
advanced magnetic techniques. On the other hand, the integration between magnetic and geochemical
data, constrained by the analyses of the magnetic/diamagnetic extracts, helped in assessing magnetic
mineral assemblages and potential metal enrichment.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
Municipal solid waste incineration (MSWI); Fly ash and bottom ash; Iron oxides; Superparamagnetic (SP) particles; Anthropogenic pollution
Elenco autori:
Funari, V.; Mantovani, L.; Vigliotti, L.; Dinelli, E.; Tribaudino, M.
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