Mitigation of ammonia emissions by natural zeolites during pig slurry composting

Authors

  • Diego Antonio Giacomini Universidade Federal de Santa Maria
  • Celso Aita Universidade Federal de Santa Maria
  • Stefen Barbosa Pujol Universidade Federal de Santa Maria
  • Sandro José Giacomini Universidade Federal de Santa Maria
  • Alexandre Doneda Universidade Federal de Santa Maria
  • Rafael Ricardo Cantú Universidade Federal de Santa Maria
  • Alexandre Dessbesell Universidade Federal de Santa Maria
  • Roberto Carlos Lüdtke Universidade Federal de Santa Maria
  • Carlos Augusto Posser Silveira Embrapa Clima Temperado

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-3921.pab2014.v49.18824

Keywords:

cation exchange capacity, clinoptilolite, automatized composting, stilbite, granulometry, nitrogen losses

Abstract

The objective of this work was to evaluate the efficiency of the natural zeolites clinoptilolite and stilbite to mitigate ammonia (NH3) losses during the initial phase of pig slurry (PS) composting. Three experiments were performed in pilot scale, each lasting 14 days. The zeolites were added to the PS in increasing rates, from 5 to 20% (w/v), on a substrate consisting of a mixture of sawdust (70%) and shavings (30%). Three applications of PS + zeolites were performed per experiment, followed by a turning. The substrate went through three additional turnings, between applications. The zeolites reduced NH3 emissions and their efficiency was directly related to the applied rate. Clinoptilolite was more efficient than stilbite. In the average of the three experiments, clinoptilolite reduced in 24 to 76% NH3 emissions. The results show the high potential of natural zeolites, mainly clinoptilolite, in mitigating NH3 volatilization during PS composting.

Published

2014-08-15

How to Cite

Giacomini, D. A., Aita, C., Pujol, S. B., Giacomini, S. J., Doneda, A., Cantú, R. R., … Silveira, C. A. P. (2014). Mitigation of ammonia emissions by natural zeolites during pig slurry composting. Pesquisa Agropecuaria Brasileira, 49(7), 521–530. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-3921.pab2014.v49.18824

Issue

Section

SOIL SCIENCE