Construction and demolition (C&D) landfills can generate significantly higher hydrogen sulfide (H2S) levels than typical municipal sites, creating challenges for emissions compliance, odor control, and energy recovery.
This technical paper highlights a large-scale project in Ohio that applied the LO-CAT technology to successfully achieve 99.9% H2S removal and have the potential to turn a waste stream into usable energy through enabling renewable gas (RNG) development.
In this paper:
- Visual charts showing H2S removal effectiveness
- Real operating data from an active landfill installation
- Performance trends across multiple process trains
If you are evaluating options for H2S removal, whether in landfill gas, biogas or any other gas streams, this paper provides a data backed look at LO-CAT’s real-world performance.