Emissions, measurement, and control of odor in livestock farms: A review

Sci Total Environ. 2021 Jul 1:776:145735. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.145735. Epub 2021 Feb 9.

Abstract

Odor emissions from intensive livestock farms have attracted increased attention due to their adverse impacts on the environment and human health. Nevertheless, a systematic summary regarding the characteristics, sampling detection, and control technology for odor emissions from livestock farms is currently lacking. This paper compares the development of odor standards in different countries and summarizes the odor emission characteristics of livestock farms. Ammonia, the most common odor substance, can reach as high as 4100 ppm in the compost area. Sampling methods for point and area source odor emissions are introduced in this paper, and odor analysis methods are compared. Olfactometers, odorometers, and the triangle odor bag method are usually used to measure odor concentration. Odor control technologies are divided into three categories: physical (activated carbon adsorption, masking, and dilution diffusion), chemical (plant extract spraying, wet scrubbing, combustion, non-thermal plasma, and photocatalytic oxidation), and biological (biofiltration, biotrickling, and bioscrubbing). Each technology is elucidated, and the performance in the removal of different pollutants is summarized. The application scopes, costs, operational stability, and secondary pollution of the technologies are compared. The generation of secondary pollution and long-term operation stability are issues that should be considered in future technological development. Lastly, a case analysis for engineering application is conducted.

Keywords: Control; Emission; Livestock farms; Measurement; Odors; Standard.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Ammonia
  • Animals
  • Composting*
  • Farms
  • Humans
  • Livestock
  • Odorants*

Substances

  • Ammonia