Abstract
It is necessary to develop a medical waste management system featuring nonburning treatment and safety functions for small medical institutions. In this article, the development of a waste management system without oxygen injection was achieved by means of hybrid heating using microwave energy and an electric heater. The shape of the microwave reactor was a rectangular parallelepiped with a volume of about 0.1 m3. In the experimental setup, microwave energy (2.45 GHz, about 800 W) was injected from the top of the reactor, while the heater (about 1 kW) was located at the bottom. Heat insulators were set into all the walls of the reactor. The gases generated in the system were vented through water and activated carbon. Five paper-based diapers with absorbed water were used as the waste sample. For the evaluation of performance, the reduction rate was defined as the ratio (in percent) of the weight before and after treatment. The reduction rate as a function of treatment time and the effect of the position of the waste in the reactor on the reduction rate and the uniformity of treatment were examined for about 3 kg of waste. It was found that the reduction rate reached as low as 4.2% at 3 h and then 3% after 8 h. The treated profile strongly depended on the position of the waste in the reactor. In particular, it was clarified that a metal cylindrical enclosure and a needle electrode played an important role in attaining uniform treatment of the waste.
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Ohtsu, Y., Yamada, R., Urasaki, H. et al. Development of a novel hybrid microwave-heater reactor for paper-based waste treatment. J Mater Cycles Waste Manag 12, 25–29 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10163-009-0259-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10163-009-0259-z