DOI QR코드

DOI QR Code

Environmental Analysis in the Windowless Laying Hen Houses

무창산란계사의 환경분석에 관한 연구

  • ;
  • Hongwei Xin (Dept. of the Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering, Iowa State University in USA) ;
  • Yi Liang (Dept. of the Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering, Iowa State University in USA)
  • Published : 2003.06.01

Abstract

This study was carried out to analyze the environmental variation of layer house at Iowa State in the USA. The analyzed seasons for this study were summer and winter. Analyzing factors are inside temperature and relative humidity, carbon dioxide concentration, ammonia concentration and emission. All factors were collected every 30 second from each house with portable monitoring units. In this study, two types of laying hen houses were monitored at the same season. One was a manure belt house, the other was a high-rise house. In order to estimate the ventilation rates of the laying hen houses, carbon dioxide concentration balance was used in this study. Ammonia concentrations and emission rates of the manure belt house are much lower than those of the high rise house. Daily mean ammonia concentrations in the manure belt house and high-rise house ranged from 3 to 7 ppm and 5 to 34 ppm, respectively. The daily ammonia emission rates averaged 0.68g/h$\cdot$500kg and 0.73g/h$\cdot$500kg for the manure belt house and 0.93g/h$\cdot$500kg and 2.89g/h$\cdot$500kg for the high-rise house in summertime and wintertime, respectively. Summertime is associated with much higher ammonia emission rates than wintertime because of much higher ventilation rates and ambient air temperature, even though the concentrations may be lower.

Keywords

References

  1. Chepte,H.J. 2002. Current state and updating of heat and moisture production rates of poultry. PhD. Dissertation, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011.
  2. Groot Koerkamp, P.W.G. 1994. Review of emissions of ammonia from housing systems for layer hens in relation to sources, processes, building design and manure handling. Journal of Agricultural Engineering Research 59: 73-87. https://doi.org/10.1006/jaer.1994.1065
  3. Xin,H., A.Tanaka. T.Wang. R.S.Gates. E.F.Wheeler. K.D.Casey. A.J.Heber. J.Ni. T.Lim. 2002. A portable system for continuous ammonia measurement in the field. A 2002 ASAE Annual International Meeting Presentation. Paper No. 02-4168
  4. Lorimor,J.C., H.Xin. 1999. Manure production and nutrient concentrations from high-rise layer houses. Applied Engineering in Agriculture Vol.15(4): 337-340 https://doi.org/10.13031/2013.5787
  5. Gates,R.S., J.L.Taraba. N.S.Ferguson and L.W.Turner. 1997. A technique for determining ammonia equilibrium and volatilization from broiler litter. 1997 ASAE Annual International Meeting. Paper No. 974074.
  6. Xin,H., Y.Liang. A.Tanaka. R.S.Gates and E.F.Wheeler. K.D.Casey. A.J.Heber. J.Ni and H.Li. 2003. Ammonia emissions from U.S. poultry houses: Part I-Measurement system and techniques. Proc. of the Third International Conference on Air Pollution from Agricultural Operations, October 11-14, 2003, Raleigh, NC, ASAE, St Joseph, MI.
  7. Xin,H., Y.Liang. R.S.Gates and E.F.Wheeler. 2002. Measurement of ammonia emissions from laying hen houses. Proc. of Iowa Egg Industrial Symposium, November 2002. Ames, IA 50011, USA.