13 results on '"Tatàno, F."'
Search Results
2. Comparative risk analysis for contaminated sites: Italian regional criteria in comparison with international standards
- Author
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D Aprile, L., Marella, G., and Tatàno, F.
- Subjects
Contaminated sites ,Comparative index ,Regional criteria ,Comparative risk analysis ,International standards ,Scoring method - Published
- 2004
3. Comparison of biomethane production and digestate characterization for selected agricultural substrates in Italy.
- Author
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Carchesio, M., Tatàno, F., Lancellotti, I., Taurino, R., Colombo, E., and Barbieri, L.
- Subjects
BIOMASS energy ,CHEMICAL oxygen demand ,METHANE ,BIODEGRADATION of organic compounds ,ORGANIC wastes - Abstract
Starting from (but not limited to) their importance in the Italian context, three agricultural substrates, two of fruit origin (grape seeds and plum stones) and one of herbaceous origin (woad), were comparatively tested for both biomethane production and digestate characterization. The anaerobic digestion tests showed that grape seeds had the highest net methane production of 253.0 NmL g volatile solids (VS)−1, followed by plum stones, whose best resulting net methane production was 174.7 NmL gVS−1, and finally by woad with a net methane production of 153.1 NmL gVS−1. Interestingly, the best methane productions of the fruit substrates were obtained with different substrate to inoculum ratios (on a VS basis), 1:1 for grape seeds but 2:1 for plum stones. On the other hand, a three-month ageing of woad caused a limited reduction of methane production. The estimation of obtained degrees of conversion, carried out on a chemical oxygen demand (COD) basis for the specific tests achieving the respective best methane productions, gave values of 48%, 31%, and 33% for grape seeds, plum stones, and woad, respectively. The estimated degrees of conversion were evaluated along with the respective methane productions and substrate COD/VS ratios. The comparison of Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectra and differential thermal analysis (DTA) profiles, carried out for selected digestates in pairs, revealed some distinctive differences in the relative intensities or presence and absence of particular peaks in the FT-IR spectra and in the relative intensities of the exothermic peaks or horizontal curve shifting of the DTA profiles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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4. Industrial wastes from the boat-building sector in the Marche Region (Italy): a parametric and chemical-physical characterization.
- Author
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Carchesio, M., Tatàno, F., Tosi, G., and Trivellone, C. H.
- Subjects
BOATBUILDING ,ANALYSIS of industrial wastes ,FIBROUS composites ,PLASTIC scrap - Abstract
Using the renowned leisure boat-building sector in the Marche Region (Italy) as a case-study, this paper addresses the characterization of (1) the industrial waste generation from the building of composite material-based boats and (2) some chemical-physical properties of representative types of boat-building residues (plastic foam, hardened resin, fibre-reinforced composite residues, and sanding dust). A parametric evaluation based on the number of employees gave a representative unit generation rate per employee (UGRpE) of 1.47 tons
waste employee-1 year-1 for the entire Marche regional boatbuilding district, whereas evaluations carried out separately for three case-study companies provided values of 1.56, 3.07, and 1.12 tonswaste employee-1 year-1 as representative for a mass-produced motor boat builder (case-study company '1'), a customized sailing boat builder (case-study company '2'), and a mould and structural component builder (case-study company '3'), respectively. The original proposal and evaluation of two additional generation rates based on physical characteristics intrinsic to the manufactured product, i.e. the unit generation rate per boat area (UGRpA) and per boat weight (UGRpW), confirmed the higher waste generation for the sailing boat builder (representative UGRpA and UGRpW values of 0.35 tonswaste m-2 boat year-1 and 2.71 tonswaste tons-1 boat year-1 , respectively) compared with the motor boat builder (representative UGRpA and UGRpW values of 0.06 tonswaste m-2 boat year-1 and 0.49 tonswaste tons-1 boat year-1 , respectively). The chemical-physical property characterization of the selected residues revealed the following aspects: a general condition of low moisture contents; significant ash contents in the glass- and carbon-fibre composite residues and the correlated sanding dust; and relatively high energy content values in the overall range 14,144-32,479 kJ kg-1 , expressed as the lower heating value. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]- Published
- 2013
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5. Anaerobic digestion of selected Italian agricultural and industrial residues (grape seeds and leather dust): combined methane production and digestate characterization.
- Author
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Caramiello, C., Lancellotti, I., Righi, F., Tatàno, F., Taurino, R., and Barbieri, L.
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ANAEROBIC digestion ,AGRICULTURAL waste research ,METHANE ,BIOLOGICAL nutrient removal ,SEWAGE sludge digestion - Abstract
A combined experimental evaluation of methane production (obtained by anaerobic digestion) and detailed digestate characterization (with physical-chemical, thermo-gravimetric and mineralogical approaches) was conducted on two organic substrates, which are specific to Italy (at regional and national levels). One of the substrates was grape seeds, which have an agricultural origin, whereas the other substrate was vegetable-tanned leather dust, which has an industrial origin. Under the assumed experimental conditions of the performed lab-scale test series, the grape seed substrate exhibited a resulting net methane production of 175.0 NmL g volatile solids (VS)−1; hence, it can be considered as a potential energy source via anaerobic digestion. Conversely, the net methane production obtained from the anaerobic digestion of the vegetable-tanned leather dust substrate was limited to 16.1 NmL gVS−1. A detailed characterization of the obtained digestates showed that there were both nitrogen-containing compounds and complex organic compounds present in the digestate that was obtained from the mixture of leather dust and inoculum. As a general perspective of this experimental study, the application of diversified characterization analyzes could facilitate (1) a better understanding of the main properties of the obtained digestates to evaluate their potential valorization, and (2) a combination of the digestate characteristics with the corresponding methane productions to comprehensively evaluate the bioconversion process. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
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6. Degradation of biogas in a simulated landfill cover soil at laboratory scale: Compositional changes of main components and volatile organic compounds.
- Author
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Randazzo A, Zorzi F, Venturi S, Bicocchi G, Viti G, Tatàno F, and Tassi F
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- Biofuels, Carbon Dioxide, Soil, Food, Methane, Waste Disposal Facilities, Alkanes, Volatile Organic Compounds, Refuse Disposal methods
- Abstract
A laboratory experiment lasting 28 days was run to simulate a typical landfill system and to investigate the compositional changes affecting the main components (CH
4 , CO2 , and H2 ) and nonmethane volatile organic compounds from biogas generated by anaerobic digestion of food waste and passing through a soil column. Gas samples were periodically collected from both the digester headspace and the soil column at increasing distances from the biogas source. CH4 and H2 were efficiently degraded along the soil column. The isotopic values of δ13 C measured in CH4 and CO2 from the soil column were relatively enriched in13 C compared to the biogas. Aromatics and alkanes were the most abundant groups in the biogas samples. Among these compounds, alkylated benzenes and long-chain C3+ alkanes were significantly degraded within the soil column, whereas benzene and short-chain alkanes were recalcitrant. Terpene and O-substituted compounds were relatively stable under oxidising conditions. Cyclic, alkene, S-substituted, and halogenated compounds, which exhibited minor amounts in the digester headspace, were virtually absent in the soil column. These results pointed out how many recalcitrant potentially toxic and polluting compounds tend to be relatively enriched along the soil column, claiming action to minimise diffuse landfill gas (LFG) emissions. The proposed experimental approach represents a reliable tool for investigating the attenuation capacities of landfill cover soils for LFG components and developing optimised covers by adopting proper soil treatments and operating conditions to improve their degradation efficiencies., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
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7. Evaluation of the biochemical methane potential of residual organic fraction and mechanically-biologically treated organic outputs intended for landfilling.
- Author
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Carchesio M, Di Addario M, Tatàno F, de Rosa S, and Gambioli A
- Subjects
- Agriculture, Waste Disposal Facilities, Methane, Refuse Disposal
- Abstract
Mechanical biological treatment (MBT) approaches are being adopted to manage residual municipal waste (RMW) to promote the prevention or reduction of potential environmental impacts of landfilling. From this perspective, the present study aimed to increase the knowledge of the biological (anaerobic) stability of different MBT organic outputs and, conversely, initial methane generation from residual organic waste. Biochemical methane potential (BMP) tests, along with initial and final characterisations of substrates and digestates, were conducted on: a mechanically separated organic fraction from RMW (ms-OFRMW); a first MBT organic output represented by a biostabilised organic fraction from RMW (bios-OFRMW); and a different MBT organic output represented by a biodried fine fraction from RMW (biod-FFRMW). The ms-OFRMW had a BMP of 445.6 Nml CH
4 g VS-1 , which was comparable or even higher than those from separately collected and source-sorted organic fractions. The fibre and liquor fractions of the digestate from ms-OFRMW with inoculum showed potential profiles of P-rich amendment and N-rich fluid phase, respectively, even satisfying environmental limits (with the exclusion only of Cu and Zn contents in fibre fraction that, however, remained within typical ranges for agricultural digestates). The BMPs for bios-OFRMW and biod-FFRMW were 143.4 and 261.0 Nml CH4 g VS-1 , respectively, indicating that these streams may still contribute to landfill methane generation. The BMPs for bios-OFRMW, biod-FFRMW, and ms-OFRMW were positively associated with the degrees of conversion of the substrates (17, 32, and 55%, respectively) and the potential dynamic respiration indexes (955, 3126, and 6062 mg O2 kg VS-1 h-1 , respectively)., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
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8. Proposal and application of a regional methodology of comparative risk assessment for potentially contaminated sites.
- Author
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Marzocchini M, Tatàno F, Moretti MS, Antinori C, and Orilisi S
- Subjects
- Italy, Risk Assessment, Soil, Groundwater
- Abstract
A possible approach for determining soil and groundwater quality criteria for contaminated sites is the comparative risk assessment. Originating from but not limited to Italian interest in a decentralised (regional) implementation of comparative risk assessment, this paper first addresses the proposal of an original methodology called CORIAN
REG-M , which was created with initial attention to the context of potentially contaminated sites in the Marche Region (Central Italy). To deepen the technical-scientific knowledge and applicability of the comparative risk assessment, the following characteristics of the CORIANREG-M methodology appear to be relevant: the simplified but logical assumption of three categories of factors (source and transfer/transport of potential contamination, and impacted receptors) within each exposure pathway; the adaptation to quality and quantity of data that are available or derivable at the given scale of concern; the attention to a reliable but unsophisticated modelling; the achievement of a conceptual linkage to the absolute risk assessment approach; and the potential for easy updating and/or refining of the methodology. Further, the application of the CORIANREG-M methodology to some case-study sites located in the Marche Region indicated the following: a positive correlation can be expected between air and direct contact pathway scores, as well as between individual pathway scores and the overall site scores based on a root-mean-square algorithm; the exposure pathway, which presents the highest variability of scores, tends to be dominant at sites with the highest computed overall site scores; and the adoption of a root-mean-square algorithm can be expected to emphasise the overall site scoring.- Published
- 2019
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9. Generation and collection of restaurant waste: Characterization and evaluation at a case study in Italy.
- Author
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Tatàno F, Caramiello C, Paolini T, and Tripolone L
- Subjects
- Food, Humans, Italy, Paper, Plastics, Solid Waste analysis, Waste Management statistics & numerical data, Restaurants organization & administration, Restaurants statistics & numerical data, Waste Management methods
- Abstract
Because restaurants (as a division of the hospitality sector) contribute to the generation of commercial and institutional waste, thus representing both a challenge and an opportunity, the objective of the present study was to deepen the knowledge of restaurant waste in terms of the qualitative and quantitative characteristics of waste generation and the performance achievable by the implementation of a separate collection scheme. In this study, the generated waste was characterized and the implemented separate collection was evaluated at a relevant case study restaurant in a coastal tourist area of Central Italy (Marche Region, Adriatic Sea side). The qualitative (compositional) characterization of the generated total restaurant waste showed considerable incidences of, in decreasing order, food (28.2%), glass (22.6%), paper/cardboard (19.1%), and plastic (17.1%). The quantitative (parametric) characterization of the generated restaurant waste determined the unit generation values of total waste and individual fractions based on the traditional employee and area parameters and the peculiar meal parameter. In particular, the obtained representative values per meal were: 0.72kgmeal
-1 for total waste, and ranging, for individual fractions, from 0.20 (for food) to 0.008kgmeal-1 (for textile). Based on the critical evaluation of some of the resulting unit waste generation values, possible influences of restaurant practices, conditions, or characteristics were pointed out. In particular, food waste generation per meal can likely be limited by: promoting and using local, fresh, and quality food; standardizing and limiting daily menu items; basing food recipes on consolidated cooking knowledge and experience; and limiting plate sizes. The evaluation of the monthly variation of the monitored separate collection, ranging from an higher level of 52.7% to a lower level of 41.4%, indicated the following: a reduction in the separate collection level can be expected at times of high working pressure or the closing of a seasonal business (typical for restaurants in tourist areas); and the monthly variation of the separate collection level is inversely correlated with that of the unit generation of total waste per meal. The interception rates of the different restaurant waste fractions collected separately presented a ranking order (i.e., 96.0% for glass, 67.7% for paper/cardboard, 34.4% for food, 20.6% for metal, and 17.9% for plastic) similar to the order of efficiencies achievable at both small and large urban levels. Finally, the original concept of the customer equivalent person (Pce ) was introduced and behaviorally evaluated at the case study restaurant, providing the values of 0.42 and 0.39kgPce -1 day-1 for the food waste generation and the landfilling of biodegradable waste by the customer equivalent person, respectively. These values were compared, respectively, with the food waste generation per person at the household level and the landfilling of biodegradable waste per inhabitant at the territorial level., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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10. Biowaste home composting: experimental process monitoring and quality control.
- Author
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Tatàno F, Pagliaro G, Di Giovanni P, Floriani E, and Mangani F
- Subjects
- Italy, Time Factors, Garbage, Refuse Disposal methods, Solid Waste analysis
- Abstract
Because home composting is a prevention option in managing biowaste at local levels, the objective of the present study was to contribute to the knowledge of the process evolution and compost quality that can be expected and obtained, respectively, in this decentralized option. In this study, organized as the research portion of a provincial project on home composting in the territory of Pesaro-Urbino (Central Italy), four experimental composters were first initiated and temporally monitored. Second, two small sub-sets of selected provincial composters (directly operated by households involved in the project) underwent quality control on their compost products at two different temporal steps. The monitored experimental composters showed overall decreasing profiles versus composting time for moisture, organic carbon, and C/N, as well as overall increasing profiles for electrical conductivity and total nitrogen, which represented qualitative indications of progress in the process. Comparative evaluations of the monitored experimental composters also suggested some interactions in home composting, i.e., high C/N ratios limiting organic matter decomposition rates and final humification levels; high moisture contents restricting the internal temperature regime; nearly horizontal phosphorus and potassium evolutions contributing to limit the rates of increase in electrical conductivity; and prolonged biowaste additions contributing to limit the rate of decrease in moisture. The measures of parametric data variability in the two sub-sets of controlled provincial composters showed decreased variability in moisture, organic carbon, and C/N from the seventh to fifteenth month of home composting, as well as increased variability in electrical conductivity, total nitrogen, and humification rate, which could be considered compatible with the respective nature of decreasing and increasing parameters during composting. The modeled parametric kinetics in the monitored experimental composters, along with the evaluation of the parametric central tendencies in the sub-sets of controlled provincial composters, all indicate that 12-15 months is a suitable duration for the appropriate development of home composting in final and simultaneous compliance with typical reference limits., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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11. Effects of a temporary HDPE cover on landfill gas emissions: multiyear evaluation with the static chamber approach at an Italian landfill.
- Author
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Capaccioni B, Caramiello C, Tatàno F, and Viscione A
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- Air Pollution legislation & jurisprudence, Air Pollution statistics & numerical data, Carbon Dioxide analysis, Environmental Monitoring legislation & jurisprudence, Italy, Methane analysis, Refuse Disposal legislation & jurisprudence, Soil chemistry, Air Pollutants analysis, Air Pollution prevention & control, Polyethylene, Refuse Disposal methods
- Abstract
According to the European Landfill Directive 1999/31/EC and the related Italian Legislation ("D. Lgs. No. 36/2003"), monitoring and control procedures of landfill gas emissions, migration and external dispersions are clearly requested. These procedures could be particularly interesting in the operational circumstance of implementing a temporary cover, as for instance permitted by the Italian legislation over worked-out landfill sections, awaiting the evaluation of expected waste settlements. A possible quantitative approach for field measurement and consequential evaluation of landfill CO(2), CH(4) emission rates in pairs consists of the static, non-stationary accumulation chamber technique. At the Italian level, a significant and recent situation of periodical landfill gas emission monitoring is represented by the sanitary landfill for non-hazardous waste of the "Fano" town district, where monitoring campaigns with the static chamber have been annually conducted during the last 5 years (2005-2009). For the entire multiyear monitoring period, the resulting CO(2), CH(4) emission rates varied on the whole up to about 13,100g CO(2) m(-2)d(-1) and 3800 g CH(4) m(-2)d(-1), respectively. The elaboration of these landfill gas emission data collected at the "Fano" case-study site during the monitoring campaigns, presented and discussed in the paper, gives rise to a certain scientific evidence of the possible negative effects derivable from the implementation of a temporary HDPE cover over a worked-out landfill section, notably: the lateral migration and concentration of landfill gas emissions through adjacent, active landfill sections when hydraulically connected; and consequently, the increase of landfill gas flux velocities throughout the reduced overall soil cover surface, giving rise to a flowing through of CH(4) emissions without a significant oxidation. Thus, these circumstances are expected to cause a certain increase of the overall GHG emissions from the given landfill site., (Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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12. Furniture wood wastes: experimental property characterisation and burning tests.
- Author
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Tatàno F, Barbadoro L, Mangani G, Pretelli S, Tombari L, and Mangani F
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- Carbon Monoxide analysis, Humidity, Italy, Nitrogen Oxides analysis, Smoke analysis, Incineration, Interior Design and Furnishings, Refuse Disposal methods, Wood
- Abstract
Referring to the industrial wood waste category (as dominant in the provincial district of Pesaro-Urbino, Marche Region, Italy), this paper deals with the experimental characterisation and the carrying out of non-controlled burning tests (at lab- and pilot-scale) for selected "raw" and primarily "engineered" ("composite") wood wastes. The property characterisation has primarily revealed the following aspects: potential influence on moisture content of local weather conditions at outdoor wood waste storage sites; generally, higher ash contents in "engineered" wood wastes as compared with "raw" wood wastes; and relatively high energy content values of "engineered" wood wastes (ranging on the whole from 3675 to 5105 kcal kg(-1) for HHV, and from 3304 to 4634 kcal kg(-1) for LHV). The smoke qualitative analysis of non-controlled lab-scale burning tests has primarily revealed: the presence of specific organic compounds indicative of incomplete wood combustion; the presence exclusively in "engineered" wood burning tests of pyrroles and amines, as well as the additional presence (as compared with "raw" wood burning) of further phenolic and containing nitrogen compounds; and the potential environmental impact of incomplete industrial wood burning on the photochemical smog phenomenon. Finally, non-controlled pilot-scale burning tests have primarily given the following findings: emission presence of carbon monoxide indicative of incomplete wood combustion; higher nitrogen oxide emission values detected in "engineered" wood burning tests as compared with "raw" wood burning test; and considerable generation of the respirable PM(1) fraction during incomplete industrial wood burning.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Health cancer risk assessment for arsenic exposure in potentially contaminated areas by fertilizer plants: a possible regulatory approach applied to a case study in Moscow region-Russia.
- Author
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Zakharova T, Tatàno F, and Menshikov V
- Subjects
- Decision Trees, Humans, Industrial Waste prevention & control, Industry legislation & jurisprudence, Industry standards, Italy, Maximum Allowable Concentration, Moscow, Proportional Hazards Models, Social Control, Formal, Soil Pollutants analysis, Soil Pollutants standards, United States, United States Environmental Protection Agency standards, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis, Water Pollutants, Chemical standards, Arsenic analysis, Environmental Exposure analysis, Environmental Exposure legislation & jurisprudence, Environmental Monitoring legislation & jurisprudence, Fertilizers analysis, Risk Assessment methods
- Abstract
At present, fertilizer industry plants are considered as a potential source of soil contamination in Russia. Therefore health risk assessment should be pursued in Russian fertilizer plant areas, but unfortunately risk assessment methodology for contaminated sites does not have yet a regulatory value in Russia. In this paper a possible and intentionally simple regulatory approach for health cancer risk assessment at phosphogypsum waste-storing potentially contaminated sites is presented. The proposed approach is applied to a potential contaminated area located in the Moscow river (Moscow Region) protective zone. At this case-study area, arsenic has been chosen as a contaminant indicator, according to the proposed selection procedure. For estimating the human exposure to arsenic through various pathways the original McKone & Daniels '91 model has been adapted. As a specific result of the risk assessment for the case-study area, it has been shown that arsenic exposure pathways (in risk-ranking order) "ingestion of agricultural products," "groundwater uptake," "dermal contact," and "soil ingestion" pose a significant health risk. From a general point of view, the proposed and applied health risk assessment approach could give some contribution (for comparison and discussion) for policies on contaminated soils to other countries. In this perspective, the paper expressly considers the current Italian regulative situation concerning restricted use of risk analysis and concerning soil quality for agricultural land use.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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