MU Researcher Looking To Reduce Hog Odor
COLUMBIA, MO.
Pork brings us the wonderful aromas of bacon frying, pork chops
grilling and ham baking. However, the odor from a hog house is less
pleasant.
A University of Missouri Extension assistant professor of
agricultural systems management is researching ways to reduce that odor.
Through funding from the MU College of Agriculture, Food and Natural
Resources, Teng Lim is working with biofilters to reduce the odor, dust
and gas emissions from typical swine operations.
Lim has evaluated small-scale biofilters at commercial hog farms and
concluded that these biofilters could be scaled up to reduce emissions
from larger hog operations.
“We are trying to evaluate different potential media to improve the
biofilters,” Lim says. He is looking at materials within the biofilters
at the MU Swine Research Center in Columbia. Wood chips are the main
type of media used in the filters, although he is also using a puffed
plastic material.
Teng Lim is researching biofilters using materials such as wood chips to reduce hog odors.
The biofilters at the MU hog facility have windows to observe the
materials inside and are raised off the ground to keep them away from
rodents. The rooms in the research barn all have individual ventilation
control systems and can be monitored over the Internet. The system
uploads all the data to a server and sends a daily email with data from
the previous 24 hours.
Lim says the data lets the researchers evaluate whether the pigs are
comfortable and monitor temperature fluctuation, humidity and pressure
to make sure the whole system is working.
When producers look to expand their operations or build a new barn,
neighbors often have concerns about the odors. Lim says biofiltration is
one of the least expensive ways to reduce odors and dust and should be
part of farmers’ best management practices.
“It also shows they are concerned with taking care of the environment and their neighbors and community as well,” he says.
MU Extension structural engineers, air quality engineers, soil
scientists and other specialists are working as a team to evaluate farms
and offer recommendations on the best ways to mitigate odor and dust.
Lim is also conducting research on anaerobic digesters, which can
help with managing waste and controlling odor while also providing a
source of energy.
Manure from the facility goes through a 21-day biochemical process
that produces methane gas, which can be used to fuel generators and
boilers, says Brandon Harvey, a graduate assistant working with Lim.
MU Extension assistant professor
Teng Lim and graduate assistant Brandon Harvey study the material inside
a biofilter at the MU Swine Research Center. The biofilters reduce hog
odors.
Credit: Photo by Jason Vance, MU Extension
Harvey says that a hog farm could meet its energy needs with an
anaerobic digester and even earn revenue selling excess energy to the
grid.
For odor mitigation alone, however, a digester is a much more expensive proposition than biofilters, he said.
“Every farm is different, so we’re trying to provide different
options, viable options, sustainable options, for people to use,” Lim
says. “As hog operations expand, it is critical that they be responsible
for the environment and be responsible for their community and
neighbors. We want to make sure they have best management practices to
adopt that improve their operations and minimize conflicts in their
community.”∆