http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasma_arc_waste_disposal
http://discovermagazine.com/2007/may/the-ultimate-garbage-disposal
Here are the unanswered questions:
There are many metals in the waste stream, including toxic heavy metals. How do you extract the metals from the output from the plasma for reuse?
The plasma breaks all chemical bonds down to individual atoms, but the gases are at extreme temperatures at which it is possible that they will recombine into complex chemicals as they cool. How can that be managed?
Plasma arc gasification is a waste treatment technology that uses high electrical energy and high temperature created by an electrical arc gasifier. This arc breaks down waste primarily into elemental gas and solid waste (slag), in a device called a plasma converter. The process has been intended to be a net generator of electricity, depending upon composition input wastes, and to reduce the volumes of waste to being sent to landfill sites.
http://discovermagazine.com/2007/may/the-ultimate-garbage-disposal
The Ultimate Garbage Disposal
A power station eats up dirty landfill and churns out clean electricity.
What could be better than a power station that eats up dirty landfill and churns out clean electricity? One facility in Utashinai, Japan, has been doing just that since 2003, using plasmaan electrically induced stream of hot, charged particlesto process up to 220 tons of municipal solid waste a day. Now a bigger and better $425 million plant is scheduled for completion by 2009 in Saint Lucie County, Florida. The operator, Atlanta-based Geoplasma, expects it to generate 160 megawatts of electricityenough to power 36,000 homesfrom a daily diet of trash.
Here are the unanswered questions:
There are many metals in the waste stream, including toxic heavy metals. How do you extract the metals from the output from the plasma for reuse?
The plasma breaks all chemical bonds down to individual atoms, but the gases are at extreme temperatures at which it is possible that they will recombine into complex chemicals as they cool. How can that be managed?