Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Black light reduces the stink in hog manure

A researcher in Iowa has found that black light, a mild form of ultra-violet light, can be used to reduce the stink of hog manure by 40  to 100 per cent.

It can also eliminate up to nine per cent of nitrous oxide, a serious greenhouse gas polluter.

The research was carried out by a team around Jacek Koziel, an associate professor of agricultural and biosystems engineering at Iowa State University.

About 10 years ago, Koziel used ultraviolet light to break down compounds that are typically found in swine and poultry odours.

“We have shown that generic UV light works very well, up to a 100 per cent reduction, of these key gases,” he said in a press release on the university’s website.

About two years ago the Indiana Soybean Alliance funded a project to look at the use of black light, a milder version of UV light that is closer to visible light.

Being less toxic, the black lights would mean fewer concerns about using it in the presence of the livestock and people working in the facilities.


“The pilot-scale research project, which was just finished, decreased odour emissions by 16 per cent while also reducing a key ‘signature’ gas responsible for the characteristic downwind odour emissions by 22 per cent,” Prof Koziel said.