The objectives of this study were to develop a mechanistic emission model to estimate ammonia flux from broiler litter and to evaluate the model at laboratory scale. In the proposed model, the ammonia flux is essentially a function of the litter's total ammoniacal nitrogen (TAN) content, moisture content, pH, and temperature, as well as the Freundlich partition coefficient (Kf), mass transfer coefficient (KG), ventilation rate (Q), and emission surface area (A). The Freundlich partition coefficient (Kf) was used as a fitting parameter in the model. A dynamic flow-through chamber system and a wind tunnel were designed to measure ammonia fluxes from broiler litter. The dynamic flow-through chamber experiments evaluated the proposed model with various litter samples under a constant temperature and wind profile. The wind tunnel experiments evaluated the proposed model under various temperatures and wind profiles. Model parameters such as Kf and KG were estimated. The results from the two experiments were consistent with each other. The estimated KG ranged from 1.11 to 27.64 m h-1, and the estimated Kf ranged from 0.56 to 4.48 L kg-1. A regression sub-model was developed to estimate Kf as function of litter pH and temperature, which indicated that Kf increased with increasing litter pH and decreased with increasing temperature. The proposed model was used to estimate the equilibrium gas phase ammonia concentration (Cg,0) in litter, and the model-predicted values were compared with the observed values. The normalized mean error (NME), the normalized mean square error (NMSE), and fractional bias (FB) were calculated to be 25%, 12%, and -0.3%, respectively, for all 94 measurements, and the model was able to reproduce 80% of the variability of the data. Sensitivity analysis of the model showed that ammonia flux is very sensitive to litter pH and to a lesser extent temperature. The relative sensitivity of pH or temperature increases as the pH or temperature increases.
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