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ARS Home » Midwest Area » Ames, Iowa » National Laboratory for Agriculture and The Environment » Soil, Water & Air Resources Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #297237

Title: Three-phase foam analysis and development of a lab-scale foaming capacity and stability test for swine manure

Author
item VAN WEELDEN, MARK - Iowa State University
item ANDERSEN, DANIEL - Iowa State University
item ROSENTRATER, KURT - Iowa State University
item Trabue, Steven - Steve
item Kerr, Brian

Submitted to: Proceedings of the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers International (ASABE)
Publication Type: Proceedings
Publication Acceptance Date: 6/7/2013
Publication Date: 7/21/2013
Citation: Van Weelden, M., Andersen, D., Rosentrater, K., Trabue, S.L., Kerr, B.J. 2013. Three-phase foam analysis and development of a lab-scale foaming capacity and stability test for swine manure. Proceedings of the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers International (ASABE). Paper No. 159443.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Foam accumulation on the manure slurry at deep pit swine facilities has been linked to flash fire incidents, making it a serious safety concern for pork producers. In order to investigate this phenomenon, samples of swine manure were collected from over 50 swine production facilities in Iowa with varying levels of foam accumulation over a seven-month period. These samples were tested for a number of physical and chemical parameters including temperature, pH, total solids, volatile solids, volatile fatty acid concentration, biochemical methane potential, and methane production rate. After establishing these parameters, a “foaming capacity and stability” test was performed where samples were placed in clear PVC tubes with air diffusers at the bottom to simulate biogas production. The amount of foam produced at a set aeration rate was recorded as a measure of foaming capacity, and foam stability was assessed by measuring the height of foam remaining at certain time intervals after aeration had ceased. The results of this test indicated that samples collected from foaming barns showed a greater capacity to produce and stabilize foam. In addition, statistical analysis indicated that manures with foam produced methane at significantly greater rates than non-foaming manures (0.154 ± 0.010 and 0.052 ± 0.003 L CH4./L slurry*day respectively, average ± standard error), and consequently had significantly greater fluxes of methane moving through the manure volume. On the other hand, the biochemical methane production assay suggested that manure from foaming pits had less potential to generate methane (112 ± 9 mL CH4/g VS) than non-foaming pits (129 ± 9 mL CH4/g VS), and the VFA analysis showed significantly lower concentrations in foaming pits (4472, 3486, and 1439 µg/g for the surface level and descending depths of the pit, respectively) as compared to non-foaming pits (9385, 8931, and 6938 µg/g for the same sample depths). When taken together, these assays suggest enhanced anaerobic digestion efficiency from foaming barns, as well as the possible accumulation of a surfactant at the manure-air interface of foaming deep pits. Overall, this work supports a three-phase system conceptualization of foam production in swine manure deep pits, and that the control of one or more of these phases will be required for mitigation.