May-June 2008

  • 1
  • 2

Landfill Gas: A Growing Fuel Source for Future Distributed Energy Applications and the Grid

Landfill methane gas is a potent greenhouse gas, but, fortunately, it's also one that's renewable and usable for the creation of green energy.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

By Peter Hildebrandt

Comments

As the push to capitalize on beneficial uses of landfill methane gas grows, the technology to do so is also evolving. A successful example can be found at the Valley Landfill Inc., also known as the Coffin Butte landfill, near Corvallis, OR. Owned by Allied Waste Inc., the Valley Landfill Inc. uses methane created by the landfill to power advanced generator set technology.

The naturally occurring methane gas, produced in landfills through the anaerobic digestion process, is captured and, in most cases, flared off to produce a less-potent greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide. This flaring process has been used for many years to safely dispose of the methane gas. Consuming the methane has the added benefit of converting the methane to carbon dioxide, reducing emissions into the atmosphere, since methane is “about 21 times more powerful at warming the atmosphere than carbon dioxide by weight,” as stated by the EPA. In recent years, landfill methane gas has become increasingly popular as a fuel source. Both the EPA and the state of Oregon categorize landfill methane gas as a renewable energy, and, as a result, some tax advantages or energy credits can be secured for power generation projects using it. 

With PNGC Power providing operational and management expertise, twelve electric cooperatives built the Coffin Butte Resource Project in 1995. The original project yielded 2.46 MW through the use of three Cat G3516C generator sets, delivering enough energy to power approximately 1,800 homes. 

In 2007, two Cat G3520C Low Energy Fuel Generator Sets were added to the facility. Combined, these new engines produce a total output of 3.2 MW, raising the total output of the facility to 5.66 MW—enough energy to power a total of 4,000 homes. This energy is sold back to the grid.

Fill Site With a Long History
The project is operated and managed by PNGC Power, which provides the expertise and employees. PNGC Power is a Portland, OR generation and transmission cooperative, providing power supply and ancillary services to 15 electric cooperative owners located in Oregon, Washington, and Idaho.

Photo: Alan Guggenheim
One of the two new 3520 Caterpillar engines
Photo: Kathi VanderZanden
The Coffin Butte Resource Project is a landfill gas-to-energy plant.

“Regarding the relationship between the landfill gas-to-energy plant and Allied Waste Inc., we’re in the business of producing electricity, and they’re in the business of providing space,” says Steve King, generation resources manager with PNGC Power at Coffin Butte Resource Project. “The division of responsibilities is really at the gate where they sell the gas to us. We operate and do minor maintenance on the well field itself, so we are actually on the landfill. But, Allied Waste is primarily responsible for the installation of all the gas wells and the connection up to the main line.”

The landfill has been on this site since World War II. It became a commercial site in the 1970’s, and the extended life of the landfill is estimated to be over 45 years. The landfill takes in approximately 550,000 tons of waste per year, which comes from twelve surrounding counties within a 75-mile radius of the site.

In 1995 when this plant was built, a 100-year plan was displayed to the operators, according to King. “But, in the landfill business it’s all about what you can get permitted when it comes to accepting solid waste,” he says. “The site is currently permitted for 45 years. As the waste decomposes and settles, they’re also able to go back in and go over areas that they’ve already filled in. The main point for us is that we have a long-term gas contract with the landfill to supply the gas, and in exchange we pay them a royalty. In conjunction with that long-term gas contract we’re assured of longevity.”

Approximately 12 to 15 new gas wells are installed in the landfill annually, so that the amount of available gas is continually being increased. At present, Coffin Butte contains 280 extraction wells on the site, varying in depth from 40 to 120 feet for the vertical wells. The horizontal wells are installed in 40-foot lifts and are contained in something referred to by King as “cubes of butter.”

“The cubes are stacked on top of each other and this is how they determine how they will move to the next lift,” King adds. “They are typically 40 feet high, 100 feet wide, and 200 feet long. As they are filling up an area, a trench is dug and a 6-inch perforated pipe is placed in the trench where it is surrounded with nice, clean round rock. The end of that pipe is hooked up to the main line valve. It is subsequently covered with refuse, and they continue on with these lifts, or cubes of butter, staggering them as they come back across.” 

After a height of 120 feet is reached (approximately three lifts), drillers come back in and drill the vertical wells. That is the point at which the wells average 40 to 120 feet in depth. The wells are connected to the main line, and the valve is used to control the extraction rate of the fuel, landfill gas. If fuel is over-pulled from the gas well, oxygen or nitrogen can be drawn in, creating a variety of problems. 

Handling the Gas
A primary concern with the use of methane from landfill gases is maintaining a high Btu rate. “This is a huge challenge for us,” King says. “It’s critical enough to our process that we have an employee with the responsibility of adjusting the gas wells. A reading at each one of the wells is taken twice monthly, and we must comply with any guidelines for how we adjust those wells. Well adjustment is critical.”

The oxygen can do a number of different things—it can destroy the methanogenic process and create the potential for an internal landfill fire. EPA guidelines are designed to prevent the intrusion of oxygen as much as possible. If a location in the landfill is found to have increasing oxygen, the first action taken is to decrease the flow. This, in turn, decreases the vacuum in the well, resulting in less pull from that well.

It is something of a balancing process, due to the fact that there is a push to optimize the methane gas coming from the well. The flow objective is to collect as much of the methane gas as possible and avoid pulling any oxygen. Oxygen can be drawn from the outside slope of where the pipe is located or alongside the pipe itself. The remedy is to simply decrease the flow.

Levels of Hydrogen Sulfide and siloxane are also managed at the plant. According to Caterpillar’s gas product marketing manager, Mike Devine, “There are two basic approaches for dealing with fuel contaminants in landfill gas-to-energy projects. The first is to pre-treat the landfill methane, taking out many of the contaminants, like H2S [Hydrogen Sulfide] and siloxanes, to produce fuel that meets the engines’ operating requirements. The second is to forego all but the simplest pre-treatment and install engines specially modified to burn impure fuel, yet still deliver acceptable component life and maintenance intervals.” In essence, engine designers like Caterpillar accepted the realities of the corrosive fuels introduced to their engines, and then modified the design of critical components and systems to counteract the effects of many of these contaminants. 

At Coffin Butte, these contaminants are controlled through maintenance on the engines. Typically, cylinder heads are pulled off each year in order to clean out the siloxane deposits where it tends to build up in the combustion chambers. “For H2S, a pretreatment is a good option,” King says. “But, currently, we are not set up for that.”

Coffin Butte is comparing the older G3516 Cat equipment with the newer G3520C engines and tracking operations to determine how closely the new engines are running, compared to the projected specifications. “This mostly involves the efficiencies of the engines,” King says. “We were advised that the two new engines would use the same amount of fuel as the three older ones, yet the net output for the newer ones would be higher. The G3516s are approximately 32% efficient, and the G3520s are about 40% efficient at the site conditions; this is what we are currently trying to evaluate. The testing phase ran from October 2007 to January 1, 2008, when commercial operations officially began. A few issues were being worked out onsite during those first weeks of operation. But, the main comparison we are studying with the two sets of engines is fuel consumption. We can maximize our economics.”

Solution to Higher Tech
From an operator’s standpoint, King finds the new Cat engines are operator-friendly and easy to set up, monitor, and control several important parameters. “These landfill gas facilities have really evolved into state-of-art systems, away from the ‘mom and pop’ operations of the past. Now it’s a complex system with a complete SCADA system involved, making it easy to monitor from home or from other remote locations.”

The sensors monitor close to 80 different indicators on the generator sets, according to Marty Hopkins, sales representative with Peterson Power. These include individual cylinder temperature, bearing temperatures, water temperature, and many other points of information obtained through the Cat control panel. The information is typically fed through the switchgear, from which the engine control module (ECM) exports data directly into Coffin Butte’s supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA) system. “Their SCADA system pulls in all the information off of our Cat switchgear, as well as pulling information from our extra CCM [customer communication module],” Hopkins says. “The CCM allows the information that is available in the engine to be exported to the customer’s building management, or SCADA system.”

Due to systems on the engine, King and his staff are better able to control the output now, especially with the fluctuations in Btu content, due to oxygen intrusion occurring which can happen simply because of barometric pressure changes throughout the day. “If we’re not out there adjusting for that, sometimes we lose our power output,” King says. “In those cases, it’s subtle enough that daily change is not needed. But, what we’re finding is that the new control systems on the G3520s are running very steady; the engine is able to compensate for slight variations by taking in more fuel automatically. That’s controlled through the air-fuel ratio controls.”

SCADA system monitoring makes it easy to monitor the landfill gas facilities from home, or other remote locations.

To maintain stability while running, an operator programs the system, and the engine adjusts fuel flow needed to maintain full load based on the level of methane entering.  Additionally, the fuel filtration system is an integral part of the process. Blowers at the power plant pull in the fuel, and filters remove water from it. At this point, the fuel is then directed to the engines.

Advertisement


A new SCADA system for the G3520s was installed at the same time that the new generator engines were installed, in late 2007. King is looking into upgrading the SCADA system for the G3516 engines and integrating the entire system, as currently they are separate systems. In case one of the engines goes down, they also have a new alarm system, which sends a text message to the operators’ cell phones.

“This Oregon landfill-gas-to-energy plant is a real success story,” Hopkins says. “They’ve had generator set availability of close to 96%. Employees at the plant have done an excellent job, as the plant runs 24 hours a day. If the engines or support equipment needs attention at four in the morning, these guys are out there.” Next Page >

  • 1
  • 2

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get Distributed Energy Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our Distributed Energy email newsletter!