| Literature DB >> 35481176 |
Ping Zhu1, Yilin Shen1, Xusheng Pan1, Bin Dong2, John Zhou3, Weidong Zhang4, Xiaowei Li1.
Abstract
Aerobic composting is a reliable technology for treating human and animal feces, and converting them into resources. Odor emissions in compost (mainly NH3 and VSCs) not only cause serious environmental problems, but also cause element loss and reduce compost quality. This review introduces recent progresses on odor mitigation in feces composting. The mechanism of odor generation, and the path of element transfer and transformation are clarified. Several strategies, mainly additives for reducing odors proven effective in the literature are proposed. The characteristics of these methods are compared, and their respective limitations are analyzed. The mechanism and characteristics of different additives are different, and the composting plant needs to be chosen according to the actual situation. The application of adsorbent and biological additives has a broad prospect in feces composting, but the existing research is not enough. In the end, some future research topics are highlighted, and further research is needed to improve odor mitigation and element retention in feces compost. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35481176 PMCID: PMC9031696 DOI: 10.1039/d1ra00355k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1Transfer and transformation of N in composting.
Fig. 2Transfer and transformation of S in composting.
Summary of compost odor response to application of different control measures in studies
| Technique types | Mechanism or main hypothesis | Specific measures | Effect on odor | Typical references |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Increase oxygen (O2) | Promote NH3 oxidation; increase the ORP, inhibit the growth of SRB; maybe produce the blow-off effect | Different aeration rates from 0.1 to 0.3 L per (kg DM min) | High aeration rate reduces VSCs and NH3 by 30.7% and 51.33%, respectively |
|
| Aeration rates from 100 to 1100 L h−1 | Increase NH3 up to 600% |
| ||
| Adjust pH | NH3: affect the NH4+ to NH3 ratio, a high pH will promote NH3 volatilization | Lower the pH from close to 9 to about 7.5 | Reduce the cumulative NH3 emissions by 47.80%, but increase the H2S emissions by 55% |
|
| VSCs: H2S is an acidic gas, alkaline environment reduces it production | ||||
| Composting bulking agent | Adjust the water content of the substrate and provide organic matter; has a certain adsorption function; improve the sizes and numbers of inter-particle voids, providing air space | Addition of dry cornstalks at a mixing ratio of 4 : 1 (wet weight) | Reduce the VSCs emissions by 66.8%, the TN loss of the compost dropped from 45.8 to 24.9% |
|
| Addition of dry cornstalks at a mixing ratio of 15% w/w | Reduced the total NH3 by 30.5% |
| ||
| Chemical agents (iron salt) | NH3: FeCl3 being an effective flocculant and causing coagulation to occur | FeCl3 dosage in the raw materials was calculated to be 10% of the TN (by molar mass) | Reduce NH3 and H2S emissions by 38% and 33%, respectively |
|
| VSCs: iron salts can react with dissolved sulfide to form elemental sulfur and sulfates | ||||
| Chemical agents (struvite) | NH3: a chemical reaction occurred, NH4+-N can be conserved in the form of struvite | Mg(OH)2 and H3PO4 dosage were calculated to be 10% of the TN (by molar mass) | Reduce NH3 and H2S emissions by about 50% |
|
| VSCs: increasing the pH of the compost | ||||
| Adsorbents | Adsorbents with porous structure and high surface area can adsorb huge amounts of odors generated in compost | Addition of biochar at a mixing ratio of 20% w/w | Reduce NH3 and VSCs emissions by 64% and 71%, respectively |
|
| Microbial agents | Affect the composting microbial community, or may inhibit odor-causing microorganisms | Inoculate 5% of laboratory-preserved strain | Reduce NH3 by 21.83%, reduce the cumulative emissions of H2S, Me2S, MeSH and Me2SS by 33.24%, 81.24%, 32.70% and 54.22%, respectively |
|
| Mature compost | Can be used as a bulking agent to improve inter-particle voids; has adsorption function; rich in microorganisms, can affect the composting microbial community | Addition of mature compost at a mixing ratio of 10% w/w | Reducing the NH3 emission by 58.0% |
|
| Addition of mature compost at a mixing ratio of 10% w/w | Reduce 65.1% H2S emission |
|