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Article
Data evidencing slow anaerobic digestion in emergency treatment and disposal of infectious animal carcasses
Data in Brief
  • Jacek A. Koziel, Iowa State University
  • Heekwon Ahn, Chungnam National University
  • Thomas D. Glanville, Iowa State University
  • Timothy S. Frana, Iowa State University
  • J. (Hans) van Leeuwen, Iowa State University
  • Lam T. Nguyen, Iowa State University
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Published Version
Publication Date
2-1-2019
DOI
10.1016/j.dib.2018.12.001
Abstract

Burial of infectious and potentially infectious livestock and poultry animals is the most common response to an emergency situation. The data set summarizes 22-week-long experiment that simulates the environment found within conventional burial trenches for emergency disposal of animal carcasses, worldwide, sometimes with a topical application of quicklime as it is required in the Republic of Korea. This data set shows the rarely presented evidence of the extremely slow decay of animal carcasses. Besides visual evidence of no visible breakdown of carcass material, i.e., carcass (or carcass quarters and coarse cuts) still resembled the initial material at the end of the study, we present data characterizing the process. Specifically, temporal variations of digestate quality (pH, ammonia, volatile fatty acids), biogas production, and the persistence of odorous volatile organic compounds are summarized. The data provide important evidence of undesirable, slow progression of the digestion process. The evidence of failure to achieve practical endpoints with the anaerobic digestion provides the impetus for seeking alternative, improved methods of disposal that will be feasible in emergency context, such as aerated burial concept (Koziel et al., 2018 [1]).

Comments

This article is published as Koziel, Jacek A., Heekwon Ahn, Thomas D. Glanville, Timothy S. Frana, J. Hans van Leeuwen, and Lam T. Nguyen. "Data evidencing slow anaerobic digestion in emergency treatment and disposal of infectious animal carcasses." Data in Brief 22 (2018): 227-233. DOI: 10.1016/j.dib.2018.12.001. Posted with permission.

Access
Open
Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Copyright Owner
The Authors
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Jacek A. Koziel, Heekwon Ahn, Thomas D. Glanville, Timothy S. Frana, et al.. "Data evidencing slow anaerobic digestion in emergency treatment and disposal of infectious animal carcasses" Data in Brief Vol. 22 (2019) p. 227 - 233
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/thomas_glanville/61/