incinerators in English

noun
1
an apparatus for burning waste material, especially industrial waste, at high temperatures until it is reduced to ash.
Burning of waste material in incinerators produce dioxin like gases and produce serious health problem.

Use "incinerators" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "incinerators" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "incinerators", or refer to the context using the word "incinerators" in the English Dictionary.

1. Afterburners and flue gas incinerators

2. Airborne dioxin is not the only problem from incinerators.

3. Modern incinerators include pollution mitigation equipment such as flue gas cleaning.

4. Gas drying systems comprising industrial air dryers, gas incinerators and combustion chambers

5. Many smokeless, odorless incinerators for disposal of animal carcasses are available commercially.

6. 13 However modern incinerators give off less dioxins thanks to tougher design standards.

7. The three main types of incinerators include controlled air, excess air, and rotary kiln.

8. When combined with water it forms hydrochloric-acid mist that can damage disposal incinerators.

9. All small biomedical incinerators and all conical waste combustors have been closed in the province.

10. By some estimates, 70 percent of the world's waste incinerators are located in Japan.

11. Most of the improvement in U.S. dioxin emissions has been for large-scale municipal waste incinerators.

12. Many small incinerators formerly found in apartment houses have now been replaced by waste compactors.

13. This has called into question the Japanese government line that the thousands of incinerators in Japan are safe.

14. Furniture factory sawdust incinerators need much attention as these have to handle resin powder and many flammable substances.

15. Classes of project defined in Annex I include such things as overhead power lines, quarries and waste incinerators.

16. The corpses were burned in the nearby incinerators, and the ashes were buried, thrown in the river, or used as fertilizer.

17. Eighty percent end up in landfills, where they will sit for thousands of years, or in incinerators, where they are burned, releasing toxic pollution.

18. In some countries, incinerators built just a few decades ago often did not include a materials separation to remove hazardous, bulky or recyclable materials before combustion.

19. The sources of the waste gas stream include effluent vent, flue or exhaust gases from power plants, sulfuric acid plants, ore roasters and solid waste incinerators.

20. The sources of said waste gas stream include effluent vent, flue or exhaust gases from power plants, sulfuric acid plants, or roasters, and solid waste incinerators.

21. Understanding Alkalis is important as alkali corrosion is a major problem in many boiler and chemical units, cement plants, incinerators and other industrial plants

22. The first UK incinerators for waste disposal were built in Nottingham by Manlove, Alliott & Co. Ltd. in 1874 to a design patented by Alfred Fryer.

23. The smaller of the two incinerators processes approximately 80 tonnes of medical waste per year and is equipped with emission control equipment that includes an afterburner and a wet scrubber.

24. PVC waste incineration increases the operating costs of the incinerators due to the use of neutralisation agents to neutralise the acid flue gas and the additional costs for the waste management of the resulting residues.

25. In order to effectively treat waste gas, incinerators are generally equipped with three-stage waste-gas treatment, including particulate matter separation (fabric filters), absorption of acidic pollutants (semi-dry or wet scrubbers) and dioxin filters

26. In order to effectively treat waste gas, incinerators are generally equipped with three-stage waste-gas treatment, including particulate matter separation (fabric filters), absorption of acidic pollutants (semi-dry or wet scrubbers) and dioxin filters.

27. Commercial retailing of heat regenerators, air heaters, burners, water heaters, heat accumulators, heat exchangers, incinerators, furnaces (other than for experimental purposes), apparatus and installations and machines for purifying air, air-conditioning installations, air driers, cooling installations for tobacco, heating boilers

28. Incinerators reduce the solid mass of the original waste by 80–85% and the volume (already compressed somewhat in garbage trucks) by 95–96%, depending on composition and degree of recovery of materials such as metals from the ash for recycling.

29. In 2005, The Ministry of the Environment of Germany, where there were 66 incinerators at that time, estimated that "...whereas in 1990 one third of all dioxin emissions in Germany came from incineration plants, for the year 2000 the figure was less than 1%.

30. The Irish Government is insisting that a network of waste incinerators, some for toxic waste, be created in my country, thus introducing an explosion of PAHs into our water, air, soil, plants and into the cells of Irish citizens where the benzenes and dioxins can wreak havoc.

31. All processes directly or indirectly linked to the production of phenol and acetone are included, in particular air compression, hydroperoxidation, cumene recovery from spent air, concentration & cleavage, production fractionation & purification, tar cracking, acetophenone recovery & purification, AMS recovery for export, AMS hydrogenation for ISB recycle, initial waste water purification (1st waste water stripper), cooling water generation (e.g., cooling towers), cooling water utilisation (circulation pumps),flare & incinerators (even if physically located OSB) as well as any support fuel consumption.