Abstract

Treatment by field-scale bioscrubber of exhaust air, including ammonia (NH3) and the greenhouse gases methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O), and carbon dioxide (CO2), from 13 intensive pig production houses located in northern Germany were investigated in 2013 and 2015. NH3 removal efficiencies varied between 35 and 100% with an overall average value of 79% under the NH3 inlet fluctuations from 34 to 755 g d-1 m-3 in both 2013 and 2015. Results of the electron microscopic analyses demonstrated that the bacteria Nitrosomonas sp. and methanotrophs type I were the dominant NH3 and CH4 oxidizers, respectively. However, overall average removal efficiencies of CH4 was approximately zero, which means CH4 is hard to remove in bioscrubbers under normal operation. The pH of recirculation water in the bioscrubber varied from 6.1 to 8.1, and the bioscrubbers with low pH values (<7.0) had high NH3 removal efficiencies (>79%). Electrical conductivity was commonly used to diagnose the bioscrubbers' performance; in the present study, electrical conductivity presented a significant linear relationship with dissolved inorganic nitrogen, which indicates the performance stability of the 13 selected bioscrubbers.

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