Abstract
The amount of bottom ash produced in Italy from municipal solid waste incinerators is estimated at over a million tons per year.
Up to now, it has almost all been disposed of in landfills. Therefore, large profit margins, from both the economic and
environmental standpoint, can be expected from the recovery of this material, or at least from a fraction of it. In this study, a
rapid procedure for the recovery of different bottom ash fractions based on mechanical sorting and aging was evaluated. The
aging process, by reducing the availability of many pollutants studied, resulted in a general increase in the bottom ash quality,
meeting the compliance leaching test values for non-hazardous wastes. However, the content of some heavy metals (particularly
Pb, Cu, Cd, Cr and Zn) often exceeded the reference values defined by law for contaminated sites, thus representing a limit for
this application. The described procedure can be useful for obtaining material recovery and a limitation in the mobility of
pollutants, which are present in incineration bottom ash. In particular, a preliminary sieving process can result in a good recovery
of inert materials (especially ferrous) while a subsequent fine fraction aging makes possible a significant decrease in the
leachability of heavy metals (as Pb and Cu) and anions (sulfates). These outcomes can be usefully employed to limit hazardous
waste disposal, even though the recovery of materials for building purposes might be hindered by very high initial pollutant
concentrations in the treated ash.