Composition of Solid Waste in a University Campus and its Potential for Composting
How to cite (IJASEIT) :
[1]
K.- ghee Tiew, K. Watanabe, N. E. A. Basri, and H. Basri, “Composition of Solid Waste in a University Campus and its Potential for Composting”, Int. J. Adv. Sci. Eng. Inf. Technol., vol. 1, no. 6, pp. 675–678, Dec. 2011.
Citation Format :
The aim of this research is to study the solid waste generation at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM). The study areas were divided to four categories; offices, dormitories, faculties, and student affairs. This study is to quantify waste generation and composition, which was separated into organics, papers, plastics, glass, metals, e-waste and others. Waste characteristics studies were done to estimate the moisture content, density, pH and carbon/nitrogen ratio (C/N ratio). The average solid waste generation (on monthly basis) at UKM is 137.57 ton. The compositions of solid waste generated are paper (15.9%), glass (0.7%), plastic (12.2%), metal (1.2%), organic (54.8%), e-waste (0.2%) and others waste (15.0%). From the laboratory results, the average moisture content, density, pH and C/N ratio values from the solid waste generated are 43.16%, 273.5 kg/m3, 5.76, and 7:1 respectively. Composting methods would be one most sustainable method to convert organic waste into valuable compounds and reduce the waste to be disposed into landfills.
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