Abstract

The effects of early acidification with sulfuric acid of animal slurry in concrete storage tanks to pH 5 on methane and ammonia emissions have been investigated on two cattle and two pig slurry storage tanks in full scale. The tanks’ up- and down-wind concentrations were measured online by cavity ring-down spectroscopy (CRDS). The inverse-dispersion method (IDM), using a backward Lagrangian stochastic (bLS) model, was used to determine the emission rates. The results show that CH4 emissions after single-dose acidification of slurry tanks in the early summer were reduced by 95 ± 14% and 95% ± 6% for cattle and pig manure, respectively, compared to the emissions measured before acidification. The reductions occurred even though pH increased during the storage with and without addition of fresh slurry. After acidification, NH3 emissions were comparable to or lower than when a natural crust was present. A supplementary experiment on small-scale slurry containers was conducted to investigate the pH development when fresh slurry was added to the acidified slurry. The influence of pH development on the long-term emission dynamics of methane is discussed by comparing the large-scale and small-scale studies. The study presents the first full-scale documentation that slurry acidification is a promising technology for mitigation of methane from slurry storage.

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