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Liquid and atmospheric ammonia concentrations from a dairy lagoon during an aeration experiment
AbstractAmmonia emissions from agriculture are an environmental and human health concern, and there is increasing pressure to reduce emissions. Animal agriculture is the largest global source of ammonia emissions and on a per cow basis dairy operations are the largest emitters. The storage and disposal of the dairy waste is one area where emissions can be reduced, aerobic biological treatment of wastewater being a common and effective way of reducing ammonia emissions. An aeration experiment in a dairy lagoon with two commercial aerators was performed for 1 month. Liquid concentrations of ammonia, total nitrogen, nitrite and nitrate were monitored before, during and after the experiment and atmospheric ammonia was measured downwind of the lagoon using a short-path differential optical absorption spectroscopy (DOAS) instrument with sensitivity. No changes in either liquid or atmospheric ammonia concentrations were detected throughout the experiment, and neither dissolved oxygen, nitrite nor nitrate could be detected in the lagoon at any time. The average ammonia concentration at 10 sampling sites in the lagoon at a depth of was and at it was NH3–N. The average atmospheric ammonia concentration downwind was about . The depth total nitrogen concentrations and total and volatile solids concentrations decreased during the experiment due to some mixing of the lagoon but the depth concentrations did not decrease indicating that the aerators were not strong enough to mix the sludge off the bottom into the whole water column.
Liquid and atmospheric ammonia concentrations from a dairy lagoon during an aeration experiment
AbstractAmmonia emissions from agriculture are an environmental and human health concern, and there is increasing pressure to reduce emissions. Animal agriculture is the largest global source of ammonia emissions and on a per cow basis dairy operations are the largest emitters. The storage and disposal of the dairy waste is one area where emissions can be reduced, aerobic biological treatment of wastewater being a common and effective way of reducing ammonia emissions. An aeration experiment in a dairy lagoon with two commercial aerators was performed for 1 month. Liquid concentrations of ammonia, total nitrogen, nitrite and nitrate were monitored before, during and after the experiment and atmospheric ammonia was measured downwind of the lagoon using a short-path differential optical absorption spectroscopy (DOAS) instrument with sensitivity. No changes in either liquid or atmospheric ammonia concentrations were detected throughout the experiment, and neither dissolved oxygen, nitrite nor nitrate could be detected in the lagoon at any time. The average ammonia concentration at 10 sampling sites in the lagoon at a depth of was and at it was NH3–N. The average atmospheric ammonia concentration downwind was about . The depth total nitrogen concentrations and total and volatile solids concentrations decreased during the experiment due to some mixing of the lagoon but the depth concentrations did not decrease indicating that the aerators were not strong enough to mix the sludge off the bottom into the whole water column.
Liquid and atmospheric ammonia concentrations from a dairy lagoon during an aeration experiment
Rumburg, Brian (author) / Neger, Manjit (author) / H. Mount, George (author) / Yonge, David (author) / Filipy, Jenny (author) / Swain, John (author) / Kincaid, Ron (author) / Johnson, Kristen (author)
Atmospheric Environment ; 38 ; 1523-1533
2003-11-24
11 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
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