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Dive into the research topics where Gary R. Hater is active.

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Featured researches published by Gary R. Hater.


Waste Management | 2003

Nitrogen management in bioreactor landfills

G.Alexander Price; Morton A. Barlaz; Gary R. Hater

One scenario for long-term nitrogen management in landfills is ex situ nitrification followed by denitrification in the landfill. The objective of this research was to measure the denitrification potential of actively decomposing and well decomposed refuse. A series of 10-l reactors that were actively producing methane were fed 400 mg NO3-N /l every 48 h for periods of 19-59 days. Up to 29 nitrate additions were either completely or largely depleted within 48 h of addition and the denitrification reactions did not adversely affect the leachate pH. Nitrate did inhibit methane production, but the reactors recovered their methane-producing activity with the termination of nitrate addition. In well decomposed refuse, the nitrate consumption rate was reduced but was easily stimulated by the addition of either acetate or an overlayer of fresh refuse. Addition of acetate at five times the amount required to reduce nitrate did not lead to the production of NH4+ by dissimilatory nitrate reduction. The most probable number of denitrifying bacteria decreased by about five orders of magnitude during refuse decomposition in a reactor that did not receive nitrate. However, rapid denitrification commenced immediately with nitrate addition. This study shows that the use of a landfill as a bioreactor for the conversion of nitrate to a harmless byproduct, nitrogen gas, is technically viable.


Waste Management | 2011

Observations on the methane oxidation capacity of landfill soils.

Jeffrey P. Chanton; Tarek Abichou; Claire Langford; Kurt A. Spokas; Gary R. Hater; Roger B. Green; Doug Goldsmith; Morton A. Barlaz

The objective of this study was to determine the role of CH(4) loading to a landfill cover in the control of CH(4) oxidation rate (gCH(4)m(-2)d(-1)) and CH(4) oxidation efficiency (% CH(4) oxidation) in a field setting. Specifically, we wanted to assess how much CH(4) a cover soil could handle. To achieve this objective we conducted synoptic measurements of landfill CH(4) emission and CH(4) oxidation in a single season at two Southeastern USA landfills. We hypothesized that percent oxidation would be greatest at sites of low CH(4) emission and would decrease as CH(4) emission rates increased. The trends in the experimental results were then compared to the predictions of two differing numerical models designed to simulate gas transport in landfill covers, one by modeling transport by diffusion only and the second allowing both advection and diffusion. In both field measurements and in modeling, we found that percent oxidation is a decreasing exponential function of the total CH(4) flux rate (CH(4) loading) into the cover. When CH(4) is supplied, a covers rate of CH(4) uptake (gCH(4)m(-2)d(-2)) is linear to a point, after which the system becomes saturated. Both field data and modeling results indicate that percent oxidation should not be considered as a constant value. Percent oxidation is a changing quantity and is a function of cover type, climatic conditions and CH(4) loading to the bottom of the cover. The data indicate that an effective way to increase the % oxidation of a landfill cover is to limit the amount of CH(4) delivered to it.


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2010

Evaluation of Landfill Gas Decay Constant for Municipal Solid Waste Landfills Operated as Bioreactors

Thabet Tolaymat; Roger B. Green; Gary R. Hater; Morton A. Barlaz; Paul Black; Doug Bronson; Jon Powell

Abstract Prediction of the rate of gas production from bioreactor landfills is important for the optimization of energy recovery and for estimating greenhouse gas emissions. To improve the predictability of gas production, landfill gas (LFG) composition and flow rates were monitored for 4 yr from one conventional and two bioreactor landfill cells at the Outer Loop Landfill in Louisville, KY. The ultimate methane yield (L 0) was estimated from the biochemical methane (CH4) potential of freshly buried refuse and the decay rate constant (k) was estimated from measured CH4 collection. The site-specific L 0 was estimated to be 48.4 m3-CH4 wet Mg−1. The estimated decay rate in the conventional cell (0.06 yr−1) was comparable to the AP-42 default value of 0.04 yr−1, whereas estimates for the two bioreactor cells were substantially higher (˜0.11 yr−1). The data document the ability of the bioreactor operation to enhance landfill CH4 generation, although the estimated decay rate is sensitive to the selected L0. The more rapid decomposition in the bioreactor cells reduces the length of time over which gas will be produced and emphasizes the importance of having a LFG collection system operational once the waste receives added moisture.


Waste Management | 2009

Effects of compost biocovers on gas flow and methane oxidation in a landfill cover.

Tarek Abichou; Koenraad Mahieu; Lei Yuan; Jeffrey P. Chanton; Gary R. Hater

Previous publications described the performance of biocovers constructed with a compost layer placed on select areas of a landfill surface characterized by high emissions from March 2004 to April 2005. The biocovers reduced CH(4) emissions 10-fold by hydration of underlying clay soils, thus reducing the overall amount of CH(4) entering them from below, and by oxidation of a greater portion of that CH(4). This paper examines in detail the field observations made on a control cell and a biocover cell from January 1, 2005 to December 31, 2005. Field observations were coupled to a numerical model to contrast the transport and attenuation of CH(4) emissions from these two cells. The model partitioned the biocovers attenuation of CH(4) emission into blockage of landfill gas flow from the underlying waste and from biological oxidation of CH(4). Model inputs were daily water content and temperature collected at different depths using thermocouples and calibrated TDR probes. Simulations of CH(4) transport through the two soil columns depicted lower CH(4) emissions from the biocover relative to the control. Simulated CH(4) emissions averaged 0.0gm(-2)d(-1) in the biocover and 10.25gm(-2)d(-1) in the control, while measured values averaged 0.04gm(-2)d(-1) in the biocover and 14gm(-2)d(-1) in the control. The simulated influx of CH(4) into the biocover (2.7gm(-2)d(-1)) was lower than the simulated value passing into the control cell (29.4gm(-2)d(-1)), confirming that lower emissions from the biocover were caused by blockage of the gas stream. The simulated average rate of biological oxidation predicted by the model was 19.2gm(-2)d(-1) for the control cell as compared to 2.7gm(-2)d(-1) biocover. Even though its V(max) was significantly greater, the biocover oxidized less CH(4) than the control cell because less CH(4) was supplied to it.


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2012

Methane emissions from 20 landfills across the United States using vertical radial plume mapping

C. Douglas Goldsmith; Jeffrey P. Chanton; Tarek Abichou; Nathan Swan; Roger B. Green; Gary R. Hater

Landfill fugitive methane emissions were quantified as a function of climate type and cover type at 20 landfills using U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Other Test Method (OTM)-10 vertical radial plume mapping (VRPM) with tunable diode lasers (TDLs). The VRPM data were initially collected as g CH4/sec emission rates and subsequently converted to g CH4/m2/day rates using two recently published approaches. The first was based upon field tracer releases of methane or acetylene and multiple linear regression analysis (MLRM). The second was a virtual computer model that was based upon the Industrial Source Complex (ISC3) and Pasquill plume stability class models (PSCMs). Calculated emission results in g CH4/m2/day for each measured VRPM with the two approaches agreed well (r 2 = 0.93). The VRPM data were obtained from the working face, temporary soil, intermediate soil, and final soil or synthetic covers. The data show that methane emissions to the atmosphere are a function of climate and cover type. Humid subtropical climates exhibited the highest emissions for all cover types at 207, 127, 102, and 32 g CH4/m2/day, for working face (no cover), temporary, intermediate, and final cover, respectively. Humid continental warm summers showed 67, 51, and 27 g CH4/m2/day for temporary, intermediate, and final covers. Humid continental cool summers were 135, 40, and 26 g CH4/m2/day for the working face, intermediate, and final covers. Mediterranean climates were examined for intermediate and final covers only and found to be 11 and 6 g CH4/m2/day, respectively, whereas semiarid climates showed 85, 11, 3.7, and 2.7 g CH4/m2/day for working face, temporary, intermediate, and final covers. A closed, synthetically capped landfill covered with soil and vegetation with a gas collection system in a humid continental warm summer climate gave mostly background methane readings and average emission rates of only 0.09 g CH4/m2/day flux when measurable. Implications The OTM-10 method is being proposed by EPA to quantify surface methane emissions from landfill covers. This study of 20 landfills across the United States was done to determine the efficacy of using OTM-10 for this purpose. Two recently published models were used to evaluate the methane flux results found with VRPM optical remote sensing. The results should provide a sense of the practicality of the method, its limitations at landfills, and the impact of climate upon the covers methane flux. Measured field data may assist landfill owners in refining previously modeled methane emission factor default values.


Geotechnical Testing Journal | 2006

Shear Strength of Degraded Reconsitituted Municipal Solid Waste

Jeffrey M. Harris; Andrew L. Shafer; William Degroff; Gary R. Hater; M. A. Gabr; Morton A. Barlaz

Relative changes in Waste shear strength parameters as a function of strain level and stress path are investigated based on the results of 16 direct simple shear (DSS) tests, one direct shear (DS) test with four stages, and three triaxial tests. The magnitudes of shear strength parameters obtained from drained DSS tests and undrained DSS tests with pore water pressure measurement were comparable. This was the case even though the effective stress path in both approaches was different. Data indicated the dependency of the mobilized strength parameters on strain, or deformation level. Generally, stress-deformation response increased monotonically with no well defined peak or ultimate stress levels. The results of the DSS and DS tests show no dependency of the strength parameters on the stress level. Results from DSS and DS indicated a range of effective strength parameters of 9 to 14 kPa for cohesion and 23°–29° for friction angle. Data from the triaxial testing showed dependency of the shear strength parameters on the initial compression stress level. Given the number of potentially confounding issues associated with the measurement of shear strength, it is rather important to also report information on sample collection methods, sample age and chemical composition, sample processing, sample composition, the size of testing equipment and level of strain (instead of ultimate or peak) at which the strength parameters are evaluated.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2011

Landfill Methane Oxidation Across Climate Types in the U.S.

Jeffrey P. Chanton; Tarek Abichou; Claire Langford; Gary R. Hater; Roger B. Green; Doug Goldsmith; Nathan Swan

Methane oxidation in landfill covers was determined by stable isotope analyses over 37 seasonal sampling events at 20 landfills with intermediate covers over four years. Values were calculated two ways: by assuming no isotopic fractionation during gas transport, which produces a conservative or minimum estimate, and by assuming limited isotopic fractionation with gas transport producing a higher estimate. Thus bracketed, the best assessment of mean oxidation within the soil covers from chamber captured emitted CH(4) was 37.5 ± 3.5%. The fraction of CH(4) oxidized refers to the fraction of CH(4) delivered to the base of the cover that was oxidized to CO(2) and partitioned to microbial biomass instead of being emitted to the atmosphere as CH(4) expressed as a percentage. Air samples were also collected at the surface of the landfill, and represent CH(4) from soil, from leaking infrastructure, and from cover defects. A similar assessment of this data set yields 36.1 ± 7.2% oxidation. Landfills in five climate types were investigated. The fraction oxidized in arid sites was significantly greater than oxidation in mediterranean sites, or cool and warm continental sites. Sub tropical sites had significantly lower CH(4) oxidation than the other types of sites. This relationship may be explained by the observed inverse relationship between cover loading and fractional CH(4) oxidation.


Journal of Environmental Engineering | 2010

Development of EPA OTM 10 for Landfill Applications

Eben D. Thoma; Roger B. Green; Gary R. Hater; C. Doug Goldsmith; Nathan Swan; Mike J. Chase; Ram A. Hashmonay

In 2006, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency posted a new test method on its website called Other Test Method 10 (OTM 10) which describes direct measurement of pollutant mass emission flux from area sources using ground-based optical remote sensing. The method has validated application to relatively small bounded area sources but additional guidance is needed for large area sources, such as landfills, where the emission zone can exceed the size of optical configuration leading to difficulties in relating measured fluxes to emissions per unit area. This paper presents the findings of a series of tracer-release experiments designed to improve the understanding of OTM 10 in landfill applications. OTM 10 plume capture efficiency data acquired at a variety of landfill sites under a range of meteorological conditions and measurement configurations are presented. Experiments indicate an overall capture efficiency factor of 0.81 with a standard deviation of 0.33. Lower capture efficiencies from side slope releases are noted (0.69). The combined data set is analyzed for factors influencing capture efficiency. A multiple linear regression is used to model the capture efficiency as a function of primary parameters including distance of the tracer release from the observing plane and wind speed. A simplified model based on the regression analysis is described and its use for approximating the area contributing to flux is presented.


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2010

Uncertainties associated with the use of optical remote sensing technique to estimate surface emissions in landfill applications.

Tarek Abichou; Jeremy Clark; Sze Tan; Jeffery Chanton; Gary R. Hater; Roger B. Green; Doug Goldsmith; Morton A. Barlaz; Nathan Swan

Abstract Landfills represent a source of distributed emissions source over an irregular and heterogeneous surface. In the method termed “Other Test Method-10” (OTM-10), the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has proposed a method to quantify emissions from such sources by the use of vertical radial plume mapping (VRPM) techniques combined with measurement of wind speed to determine the average emission flux per unit area per time from nonpoint sources. In such application, the VRPM is used as a tool to estimate the mass of the gas of interest crossing a vertical plane. This estimation is done by fitting the field-measured concentration spatial data to a Gaussian or some other distribution to define a plume crossing the vertical plane. When this technique is applied to landfill surfaces, the VRPM plane may be within the emitting source area itself. The objective of this study was to investigate uncertainties associated with using OTM-10 for landfills. The spatial variability of emission in the emitting domain can lead to uncertainties of –34 to 190% in the measured flux value when idealistic scenarios were simulated. The level of uncertainty might be higher when the number and locations of emitting sources are not known (typical field conditions). The level of uncertainty can be reduced by improving the layout of the VRPM plane in the field in accordance with an initial survey of the emission patterns. The change in wind direction during an OTM-10 testing setup can introduce an uncertainty of 20% of the measured flux value. This study also provides estimates of the area contributing to flux (ACF) to be used in conjunction with OTM-10 procedures. The estimate of ACF is a function of the atmospheric stability class and has an uncertainty of 10–30%.


Waste Management | 2013

Liquid balance monitoring inside conventional, Retrofit, and bio-reactor landfill cells.

Tarek Abichou; Morton A. Barlaz; Roger B. Green; Gary R. Hater

The Outer Loop landfill bioreactor (OLLB) in Louisville, KY, USA has been the site of a study to evaluate long-term bioreactor performance at a full-scale operational landfill. Three types of landfill units were studied including a conventional landfill (Control cell), a new landfill area that had an air addition and recirculation piping network installed as waste was being placed (As-Built cell), and a conventional landfill that was modified to allow for liquids recirculation (Retrofit cell). During the monitoring period, the Retrofit, Control, and As-Built cells received 48, 14, and 213LMg(-1) (liters of liquids per metric ton of waste), respectively. The leachate collection system yielded 60, 57 and 198LMg(-1) from the Retrofit, Control, and As-Built cells, respectively. The head on liner in all cells was below regulatory limits. In the Control and As-Built cells, leachate head on liner decreased once waste placement stopped. The measured moisture content of the waste samples was consistent with that calculated from the estimate of accumulated liquid by the liquid balance. Additionally, measurements on excavated solid waste samples revealed large spatial variability in waste moisture content. The degree of saturation in the Control cells decreased from 85% to 75%. The degree of saturation increased from 82% to 83% due to liquids addition in the Retrofit cells and decreased back to 80% once liquid addition stopped. In the As-Built cells, the degree of saturation increased from 87% to 97% during filling activities and then started to decrease soon after filling activities stopped to reach 92% at the end of the monitoring period. The measured leachate generation rates were used to estimate an in-place saturated hydraulic conductivity of the MSW in the range of 10(-8) to 10(-7)ms(-1) which is lower than previous reports. In the Control and Retrofit cells, the net loss in liquids, 43 and 12LMg(-1), respectively, was similar to the measured settlement of 15% and 5-8% strain, respectively (Abichou et al., 2013). The increase in net liquid volume in the As-Built cells indicates that the 37% (average) measured settlement strain in these cells cannot be due to consolidation as the waste mass did not lose any moisture but rather suggests that settlement was attributable to lubrication of waste particle contacts, softening of flexible porous materials, and additional biological degradation.

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Morton A. Barlaz

North Carolina State University

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Tarek Abichou

Florida State University

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Nathan Swan

University of Rochester

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Eben D. Thoma

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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