Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1055657 Journal of Environmental Management 2015 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Biofilters were evaluated for odor, NH3, and H2S reductions in swine barns.•Locally available wood barks were used as the media for biofilters.•Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) software was used for aerodynamic study.•Maximum odor reductions up to 73.5–76.9% and NH3 and H2S up to 95.2–100.0%.•Pressure drop characteristics demonstrated the feasibility of wood bark biofilters.

Two down-flow wood bark-based biofilters were evaluated for their effectiveness in treating odor, NH3 and H2S under actual swine farm conditions. The water requirement for maintaining proper media moisture contents (MC) under different ventilation rates and intervals were determined. The effect of media depth and MC on the biofilters' performance was also evaluated. The aerodynamic resistance on biofilters was studied using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) software. Water requirements for biofilters were obtained in the range of 3.8–556.0 L/m3/d for ventilation duration of 1–24 h/d (depending on the age of the pig and environmental conditions). The highest reductions in odor, NH3 and H2S, obtained in this study at empty bed residence times (EBRT) of 1.6–3.1 s, were 73.5–76.9%, 95.2–97.9% and 95.8–100.0%, respectively. The pressure drop was 28.8–68.8 Pa for a media depth of 381 mm at an EBRT of 1.6–3.1 s and an MC of 64–65%. The pressure drop followed a secondary order polynomial line with both airflow rate and media MC (R2 = 0.927–0.982). The results of odor, NH3 and H2S reduction efficiency and pressure drop suggest a media depth of ≥254 mm, MC ≥ 35–50% and EBRT of 2–3 s for successful operations of the wood bark-based biofilters. A high correlation was found between the measured and predicted pressured drops obtained using CFD software (R2 = 0.921, RMSE = 0.145).

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
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