UNRECOGNIZED CAUSE OF LANDFILL FAILURES.
With 80% of the nation's garbage still being buried in
landfills (see #176), we must ask whether our landfills are as
well-designed as can be. One important and overlooked source of
landfill failures is lightning from thunderstorms.
As most of our readers know, a landfill is a bathtub in the
ground. The bathtub can leak through its bottom, or it can fill
up with fluids and leak over its sides. To prevent this from
happening, landfills are now "capped" with clay or plastic when
they are retired from service. The cap is supposed to act as an
umbrella, preventing rain from filling up the bathtub and
preventing the formation of toxic leachate that might pour out
the bottom if the bottom leaked. The cap is the essential
element in a landfill's safety design: it keeps liquids out.
When the cap is destroyed, nature will begin to distribute the
contents of the landfill into the local environment, using water
as the vehicle for distribution. Damage ensues.
Lightning packs a tremendous wallop when it strikes the
ground. Lightning bolts last only a few millionths of a second,
but they typically involve five million volts and anywhere from
2,500 to 220,000 amperes of current. Lightning can bore large
holes in the ground where it strikes. Geologists have a name for
holes made by lightning: fulgarites (after the Latin name for
lightning, fulgar). Fulgarites are created when lightning
strikes sandy soil; a hole is bored into the sand and the sides
of the hole get so hot (estimated to be 3200 degrees Fahrenheit,
or 1800 degrees Celsius) that the sand melts and forms a glass
tube. A large hole bored by lightning can be eight inches in
diameter and can reach to a depth of 15 feet.
Because buried telephone cables need protection, a lot of
data has been collected on the frequency of lightning strikes.
Lightning accompanies two types of thunderstorms:
convection-type storms caused by local heating of air near the
earth, and frontal-type storms resulting when a warm, moist
front meets a cold front which may extend over hundreds of
miles. Frontal-type storms produce more lightning strikes per
storm.
Which type of storm predominates in your region? Take a look
at our map of the U.S. The uppermost heavy line from Tucson, AZ
through Albuquerque, NM, sloping up to Lawrence, KS, then to
Urbana, IL, and on east to Washington, DC, separates the U.S.
into two storm-type zones. Areas above this line have mostly
convection-type storms, and areas below the line have
frontal-type storms. We'll call this the "storm line."
As the map shows, the number of thunder storms in the U.S.
varies from an average of 10 per year along the western edge of
California, Oregon and Washington, to a high of 100 per year in
central Florida.
To estimate the number of lightning strikes you would expect
per square mile per year at your local landfill, multiply the
number of storms per year times a "stroke factor" which is 0.28
if you're above the storm line, and 0.37 if you're below the
storm line.
Let's take New Jersey, for example. We're above the storm
line, and we have 20 lightning storms per year, so we multiply
by 0.28 to learn that each square miles of land will be struck
by lightning 20 x 0.28 = 5.6 times per year, or 56 times each
decade. How does that translate into, say, a 10-acre landfill?
Ten acres = 0.016 square miles (one-sixtieth of a square mile),
so a ten-acre landfill will be struck an average of 56 x 0.016 =
0.9 (close to 1) times per decade, or about once every 11 years.
A landfill that covered twice as much area (20 acres) would
be struck twice as often; one ten times as big (100 acres) will
be struck ten times as often. And, because a landfill is
ordinarily elevated above surrounding terrain, these average
numbers actually underestimate the frequency of lightning
strikes. Landfills are ordinarily elevated above surrounding
terrain because garbage is heaped up in a pile. Big landfills
can rise a hundred feet above the surrounding landscape; some
rise even higher. Landfills are therefore more susceptible to
lightning strikes than is flat ground.
Let's take another example. Central and northern Indiana have
40 storms per year and they're above the storm dividing line, so
each square mile is struck an average of 40 x 0.28 = 11 times
per year, or 110 times per decade. A 10acre landfill in this
region will be struck, on average, 11 x 0.016 = 1.76 (nearly 2)
times per decade, or roughly once every six years.
Central Florida is below the storm line and it has 100 storms
per year, so each square mile of land will be struck 100 x 0.37
= 37 times per year or 370 times per decade. A 10-acre landfill
there would be struck 370 x 0.016 = 5.9 (about 6) times per
decade.
Since lightning can burn a hole eight inches in diameter up
to 15 feet deep, it must be obvious that no plastic liner (1/10
of an inch thick) will deter lightning in any way whatsoever.
The only cap that could work would be a 20-footthick layer of
clay. An alternative would be lightning protection.
The National Fire Protection Code requires lightning
protection for all structures containing flammable liquids or
gases. The explosive methane gas generated within a landfill
probably meets this specification. To fulfill their objectives
of protecting the environment, landfill caps should be fitted
with lightning protection, just the way military ammunition
dumps are protected. Tall towers with heavy cables strung
between them, solidly grounded, are one option. A 10-acre
landfill could be protected by four 250' towers spaced 900 ft.
apart. Such towers would have to meet Federal Aviation
Administration regulations for obstruction lights and standby
power supplies, to minimize hazards to aircraft.
Large landfills could not be protected by towers because the
towers themselves would penetrate the cap, destroying its
integrity. Such large fills will need to be entirely covered
with heavy, well-grounded steel cages (called Faraday cages).
Lightning protection is a well-developed field of
engineering. If the designers, owners and regulators of
landfills are serious about protecting the environment, they
will address the hazards of lightning and take the necessary
steps to see that public health is protected from landfill
failures caused by lightning.
Get: AT&T, TELECOMMUNICATION ELECTRICAL PROTECTION (Place of
publication unknown: AT&T Technologies, Inc., 1985). Available
by phoning 1-800-432-6600, or 1-317-352-8556. Order publication
"Select Code 350-060."
Peter E. Viemeister, THE LIGHTNING BOOK (Garden City, New
York: Doubleday, 1961).
National standards for lightning protection are documented in
LIGHTNING PROTECTION CODE 1983 ANSI [American National Standards
Institute]/NFPA [National Fire Protection Association] No. 78
available from: NFPA, Batterymarch Park, Quincy, MA 02269; phone
(617) 770-3000.
For alerting us to lightning hazards to landfills, we are
indebted to Mr. Leon Whittaker, Rt. 1, Box 266, Cumberland, VA
23040.
--Peter Montague, Ph.D.
Descriptor terms: landfilling; lightning;
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