o fully leverage that resource, UB's
Center for Integrated Waste Management has been awarded $1.8 million by
Empire State Development to expand the use of recycled tires in
construction applications through research and education.
The effort, called the New York State
Tire Derived Aggregate Program, is the state's most comprehensive
effort yet to explore and establish new markets for used tires in
civil-engineering applications.
Daniel Gunderson, Empire State
Development upstate chairman, said it is "taking a new, integrated
approach to reviving the upstate economy. The UB center is a great
example of how university research can be translated into marketable
products that will create jobs."
The purpose of the program is to
serve as a catalyst to promote the use of tire-derived aggregate (TDA)
or tire chips, as they are known commonly, in civil-engineering
applications around the state.
"New York State's interest is in
making sure there is a healthy and diverse market for recycled tire
products," said Louis P. Zicari Jr., associate director of the Center
for Integrated Waste Management and one of the principal investigators
on the Empire State Development grant. "We're helping the state
diversify the TDA market by looking at technological, economic and
regulatory issues."
Under the program, the Center for
Integrated Waste Management will conduct research on the use of tire
chips for civil-engineering applications and establish a central
clearinghouse of information on the subject, tracking progress of all
civil-engineering uses of tire chips around the state. It also will
establish a forum to bring together state and national stakeholders,
including tire-chip producers, intermediary consumers, end users,
technology providers, government agencies, researchers and regulators.
Empire State Development has charged
the TDA program at UB with functioning as a third-party, neutral source
to convene stakeholders both at the national and state levels on the
subject of civil-engineering applications for tire chips.
That's a role that the Center for
Integrated Waste Management is suited ideally to play, according to A.
Scott Weber, executive director of the center, co-principal
investigator with Zicari and professor and chair of the Department of
Civil, Structural and Environmental Engineering in the School of
Engineering and Applied Sciences.
"We're not manufacturers and we're
not regulators," Weber said. "We can provide a sound scientific basis
on which to base rational judgments unfettered by self-interest."
According to Zicari, Western New York
is a logical place to site such a project, given that more
tire-recycling companies are located here than in any other region in
the state. At the same time, the project will involve companies and
organizations throughout the state.
Some of the construction applications
that will be studied under the new program include septic system leach
fields, insulating layers for new roads, lightweight fill to use behind
bridge embankments and backfill for building foundations.
The announcement of the five-year
grant builds on a successful demonstration project that the Center for
Integrated Waste Management conducted for Empire State Development in
which the researchers designed, installed and analyzed the benefits of
a full-size septic leach field using TDA as a replacement for stone
aggregate.
It is the only demonstration project
in the state that involved testing tire chips as a replacement for
stone aggregate in septic-system applications.
The project examined permeability of TDA, leaching, metal concentrations in soil, long-term durability and other properties.
Installed in 2000 at Modern
Corporation's tire recycling facility in Model City in Niagara County,
the wastewater-treatment system services a building used by more than a
dozen employees over two shifts, a scale equivalent to the level of use
that would occur in a typical four-person household.
Seven years later, the system
continues to function properly and in a manner that is comparable to
stone aggregate. It also undergoes periodic scientific, technical and
engineering analysis.
As a result of the UB center's
demonstration project, the New York State Department of Health is
expected to approve the use of recycled tires in septic-system
applications in the near future.
According to the Center for
Integrated Waste Management, a single septic system utilizing TDA would
successfully recycle at least 1,500 discarded tires. That means that
just 1,400 new septic systems per year in the state would utilize more
than 2 million discarded tires.
The center's preliminary cost comparison also showed that TDA should be 10-15 percent less expensive than stone aggregate.
Zicari noted that while several other
states already have approved tire chips for wastewater-treatment
applications, few have completed the rigorous scientific, technical or
economic analyses as detailed as those conducted by the Center for
Integrated Waste Analysis. (Reports are available by clicking here.)
"Our work is going far beyond the scope of what most other states have done," said Weber.
The New York State Waste Tire
Management & Recycling Act of 2003 established the state's
priorities for the recycling and reuse of scrap tires, as well as the
development of economically viable and environmentally beneficial
alternatives to landfilling or stockpiling. The TDA program in the
Center for Integrated Waste Management directly addresses one of the
provisions of the act requiring Empire State Development to implement a
comprehensive program to expand scrap tire recycling markets.
The TDA program also addresses a
shortage of stone aggregate that some counties are facing. As the
opening of new stone quarries is minimized, this shortage is a
consistent problem throughout the state.
In addition to Zicari and Weber, John
J. Spagnoli, research fellow in the Center for Integrated Waste
Management, and UB undergraduate and graduate students will be involved
in the TDA program.
Based in the Department of Civil,
Structural and Environmental Engineering, the Center for Integrated
Waste Management, which celebrates its 20th anniversary this year,
seeks innovative solutions to environmental challenges by bringing
together members of academia, industry and government to find better
ways to conserve and recover natural and man-made resources used in
industrial processes and by consumers. It was established in 1987 by
the New York State Legislature as the New York State Center for
Hazardous Waste Management to initiate and coordinate environmental
research and technology development.
The announcement of this project
comes during UB's "Greener Shade of Blue" initiative to raise awareness
about climate change and celebrate the university's longstanding
commitment to environmental stewardship.
By Ellen Goldbaum
Source : University at Buffalo Reporter