| Literature DB >> 29358021 |
Quan Wang1, Mukesh Kumar Awasthi2, Xiuna Ren1, Junchao Zhao1, Ronghua Li1, Zhen Wang1, Meijing Wang1, Hongyu Chen1, Zengqiang Zhang3.
Abstract
The effect of enhancing wood vinegar (WV) with a mixture of biochar (B) and zeolite (Z) to compost pig manure (PM) in a 130 L reactor was evaluated to determine the levels of greenhouse gas (GHG) and ammonia emissions. Six treatments were prepared in a 2:1 ratio of PM mixed with wheat straw (WS; dry weight basis): PM + WS (control), PM + WS + 10%B, PM + WS + 10%B + 10%Z, and PM + WS with 0.5%, 1.0% and 2.0%WV combined with 10%B + 10%Z. These were composted for 50 days, and the results indicated that the combined use of B, Z, and WV could shorten the thermophilic phase and improve the maturity of compost compared to the control treatment. In addition, WV mixed with B and Z could reduce ammonia loss by 64.45-74.32% and decrease CO2, CH4, and N2O emissions by 33.90-46.98%, 50.39-61.15%, and 79.51-81.10%, respectively. Furthermore, compared to treatments in which B and B + Z were added, adding WV was more efficient to reduce the nitrogen and carbon loss, and the 10%B + 10%Z + 2%WV treatment presented the lowest loss of carbon (9.16%) and nitrogen (0.75%). Based on the maturity indexes used, nitrogen conservation, and efficiency of GHG emissions reduction, the treatment 10%B + 10%Z + 2%WV is suggested for efficient PM composting.Entities:
Keywords: Compost; Manure; Methane; Mixture additives; Nitrogen loss
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29358021 DOI: 10.1016/j.wasman.2018.01.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Waste Manag ISSN: 0956-053X Impact factor: 7.145