USDA's Agricultural Research Service soil scientists Matias Vanotti and Ariel Szogi have filed U.S. Patent Application #13/164,363 for an invention that could help change on-farm nitrogen management. It’s a system that uses gas-permeable membranes to capture and recycle ammonia from livestock wastewater before the ammonia goes into the air. The two scientists, who work at the ARS Coastal Plains Soil, Water, and Plant Research Center in South Carolina, found that they could use these membranes to reduce ammonia emissions from livestock waste and capture concentrated liquid nitrogen that could be sold as fertilizer.

The membranes are similar to materials already used in waterproof outdoor gear and in biomedical devices that add oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from blood.

Using these materials, the scientists recorded an average removal rate of 45 to 153 milligrams (mg) of ammonia per liter per day when manure ammonia concentrations ranged from 138 to 302 mg ammonia per liter.

When manure pH increased, ammonia recovery also increased. For instance, the scientists were able to recover around 1.2 percent of the total ammonia emissions per hour from manure with a pH of 8.3. But the recovery rate increased 10 times – to 13 percent per hour – when the pH was 10.0.

“When we started this research more than 10 years ago, the membranes were very expensive,” Vanotti says. “But the prices have come down, so its use for recovering the ammonia in manure is now much more cost effective.”

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The scientists want to scale up the process to see whether the membrane modules would lower ammonia emissions when installed in manure pits below the slotted floors in livestock barns or in manure tanks and lagoons.

If so, they believe that livestock producers could use the technology to help meet air-quality regulations, save fuel, protect the health of livestock and their human caretakers, improve livestock productivity, and recover nitrogen that can be sold as fertilizer.

This research is part of Agricultural and Industrial Byproducts, an ARS national program (#214).

To reach the scientists mentioned in this article, contact Ann Perry, USDA – ARS Information Staff, 5601 Sunnyside Ave., Beltsville, MD 20705-5129, or call (301) 504-1628.

This article was published in the November/December 2012 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.