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Inferential model estimates of ammonia dry deposition in the vicinity of a swine production facility

  • US EPA National Risk Management Research Laboratory
  • North Carolina State University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

43 Scopus citations

Abstract

This project investigates NH3 dry deposition around a commercial swine production facility in eastern North Carolina. Passive diffusion-tube samplers were used to measure weekly integrated NH3 concentrations at 22 locations along horizontal gradients from the barn/lagoon emissions complex (source) out to a distance of 700 m. A two-layer canopy compensation point model was used to predict bi-directional NH3 exchange within a 500 m circular buffer surrounding the source. The model takes into account differences in soil and vegetation emission potential, as well as canopy physical characteristics, among three primary surfaces surrounding the site: forest, crops spray fertilized with swine waste, and other fertilized crops. Between June 2003 and July 2005, mean observed NH3 concentrations ranged from 169.0 μg NH3 m-3 at a distance of 10 m from the source to 7.1 and 13.0 μg NH3 m-3 at 612 and 698 m in the predominant upwind and downwind directions, respectively. Median predicted dry deposition rates ranged from 145 kg NH3-N ha-1 yr-1 at 10 m from the source to 16 kg NH3-N ha-1 yr-1 at 500 m, which is ≈3.5× wet deposition of NH4+-N. Assuming a steady-state emission factor of 7.0 kg NH3 animal-1 yr-1 and a median population of 4900 animals, NH3 dry deposition over the nearest 500 m from the barn/lagoon complex accounted for 10.4% (3567 kg NH3) of annual emissions (34,300 kg NH3). A model sensitivity analysis shows that predicted deposition rates are more sensitive to assumptions regarding cuticular uptake relative to soil and vegetation emission potentials. © 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3407-3418
Number of pages12
JournalAtmospheric Environment
Volume42
Issue number14
DOIs
StatePublished - May 1 2008

Keywords

  • Ammonia
  • Bi-directional flux
  • Compensation point
  • Dry deposition
  • Resistance model

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