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Article
Quality Assured Measurements of Animal Building Emissions: Gas Concentrations
Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association
  • Albert J. Heber, Purdue University
  • JiQin Ni, Purdue University
  • Teng T. Lim, Purdue University
  • Pei-Chun Tao, Purdue University
  • Amy M. Millmier, University of Missouri
  • Jacek A. Koziel, Texas A&M University
  • David B. Beasley, North Carolina State University
  • Steven J. Hoff, Iowa State University
  • Richard E. Nicolai, South Dakota State University
  • Larry D. Jacobson, University of Minnesota, St. Paul
  • Yuanhui Zhang, University of Illinois, Urbana
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Accepted Manuscript
Publication Date
1-1-2006
DOI
10.1080/10473289.2006.10465680
Abstract

Comprehensive field studies were initiated in 2002 to measure emissions of ammonia (NH3), hydrogen sulfide (H2S), carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), nonmethane hydrocarbons (NMHC), particulate matter <10 µm in diameter, and total suspended particulate from swine and poultry production buildings in the United States.

This paper focuses on the quasicontinuous gas concentration measurement at multiple locations among paired barns in seven states. Documented principles, used in air pollution monitoring at industrial sources, were applied in developing quality assurance (QA) project plans for these studies. Air was sampled from multiple locations with each gas analyzed with one high quality commercial gas analyzer that was located in an environmentally controlled on-farm instrument shelter. A nominal 4 L/min gas sampling system was designed and constructed with Teflon wetted surfaces, bypass pumping, and sample line flow and pressure sensors. Three-way solenoids were used to automatically switch between multiple gas sampling lines with ≥10 min sampling intervals. Inside and outside gas sampling probes were between 10 and 115 m away from the analyzers. Analyzers used chemiluminescence, fluorescence,photoacoustic infrared, and photoionization detectors for NH3, H2S, CO2, CH4, and NMHC, respectively. Data were collected using personal computer-based data acquisition hardware and software. This paper discusses the methodology of gas concentration measurements and the unique challenges that livestock barns pose for achieving desired accuracy and precision, data representativeness, comparability and completeness, and instrument calibration and maintenance.

Comments

This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis as Heber, Albert J., Ji-Qin Ni, Teng T. Lim, Pei-Chun Tao, Amy M. Schmidt, Jacek A. Koziel, David B. Beasley et al. "Quality assured measurements of animal building emissions: Gas concentrations." Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association 56, no. 10 (2006): 1472-1483. DOI: 10.1080/10473289.2006.10465680. Posted with permission.

Copyright Owner
Air & Waste Management Association
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Albert J. Heber, JiQin Ni, Teng T. Lim, Pei-Chun Tao, et al.. "Quality Assured Measurements of Animal Building Emissions: Gas Concentrations" Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association Vol. 56 Iss. 10 (2006) p. 1472 - 1483
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/steven_hoff/156/