C
Charlotte Scheutz
Researcher at Technical University of Denmark
Publications - 231
Citations - 6677
Charlotte Scheutz is an academic researcher from Technical University of Denmark. The author has contributed to research in topics: Methane & Landfill gas. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 217 publications receiving 5235 citations.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Microbial methane oxidation processes and technologies for mitigation of landfill gas emissions.
Charlotte Scheutz,Peter Kjeldsen,Jean E. Bogner,Alex De Visscher,Julia Gebert,Helene Hilger,Marion Huber-Humer,Kurt A. Spokas +7 more
TL;DR: Additional research and technology development is needed before methane mitigation technologies utilizing microbial methane oxidation processes can become commercially viable and widely deployed.
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Municipal solid waste composition: Sampling methodology, statistical analyses, and case study evaluation
Maklawe Essonanawe Edjabou,Morten Jensen,Ramona Götze,Kostyantyn Pivnenko,Claus Petersen,Charlotte Scheutz,Thomas Fruergaard Astrup +6 more
TL;DR: The results showed that residual household waste mainly contained food waste and miscellaneous combustibles and the individual percentage composition of food waste, paper, and glass was significantly different between the housing types, indicating that housing type is a critical stratification parameter.
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Environmental factors influencing attenuation of methane and hydrochlorofluorocarbons in landfill cover soils.
Charlotte Scheutz,Peter Kjeldsen +1 more
TL;DR: The most important parameters controlling oxidation in landfill cover soil were found to be temperature, soil moisture, and methane and oxygen supply, and higher ammonium concentrations inhibited the oxidation process.
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Life cycle assessment of sewage sludge management: A review:
TL;DR: Large discrepancies were found in the selection of the environmental emissions to be included and how they were estimated in the analysis, and consolidation of the modelling approach in the following area are recommended: quantification of fugitive gas emissions and modelling of disposal practices.
Journal ArticleDOI
Attenuation of methane and volatile organic compounds in landfill soil covers
TL;DR: Mass balance calculations using the maximal oxidation rates obtained demonstrated that landfill soil covers have a significant potential for not only methane oxidation but also cometabolic degradation of selected volatile organics, thereby reducing emissions to the atmosphere.