scholarly journals Dry filtration technology application with activated carbon media to remove odor ammonia emissions from production process feed mill industry

2021 ◽  
Vol 896 (1) ◽  
pp. 012047
Author(s):  
N Harihastuti ◽  
S Djayanti ◽  
I R J Sari

Abstract A pilot project research has been conducted to eliminate odor pollution from the feed mill industry. The feed industry in Indonesia has grown, especially in poultry feed production produced in modern feed mills equipped with pelleting technology. This industry is also having an environmental impact in the form of air pollution of its production activities. The laboratory analysis showed that ammonia has emitted, and it was the dominant parameter as the cause of odor in air pollution. This research aims to remove ammonia emissions using dry filtration technology with activated carbon as the filter media in the upright reactor. The reactor is designed from stainless steel material, consisting of 3 trays. The distance between trays is 300 mm, the dimensions of the tray are L.2430 mm, W.1815 mm, H.600 mm, the tray hole diameter is 3 mm. The average gas flow rate is 200-300 Nm3/min. Activated carbon used granules, size 6-8 mm, 200 mm thick in the tray. The results showed that the efficiency of ammonia removal was 81.96%-94.40% and had met the quality standards. This technology is feasible to control ammonia as an odor pollutant in the feed mill industry.

2018 ◽  
Vol 55 (4C) ◽  
pp. 38
Author(s):  
Nguyen Thi Kim Anh

This research aimed to investigate the ability of handling ammonia emission from waste gas by adsorption methods. The absorbents were activated carbon materials, which were made from coconut fiber (AC-1) and peanut husk (AC-2), impregnated with ZnCl2. Both of these materials have shown their abilities to remove NH3 (over 90 % efficiency) at the concentration of about 9000 ppm, while the removal efficiency of commercial activated carbon (AC-3) was 70 %. At the inlet concentration of about 3000 ppm, the maximum ammonia removal efficiency was 96.23 % when using AC-1 and 97.74 % using AC-2. The saturation time of each activated carbon was also examined. At inlet concentration of 2800 – 3200 ppm with gas flow rate was 0.4 L.min-1 and 5 g in mass material, the ammonia removal efficiencies of AC-1 and AC-2 were maintained at 80 % lasting for 600 minutes, but the efficiency of AC-3 rapidly decreased to 30 %. In all experiments, the activated carbon that made from peanut husk (AC-2), impregnated with ZnCl2 showed higher performance than one made from coconut fiber (AC-1) and commercial activated carbon (AC-3).


2007 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhamad Rosli Sulaiman ◽  
Sharifah Aishah Syed Abdul Kadir ◽  
Ruhani Ibrahim ◽  
Maryam Husin

Incineration is one of the options available to dispose municipal solid wastes (MSW) as it is capable of breaking down hazardous non-metallic wastes besides destroying bacteria and viruses. In terms of volume of wastes, incineration can reduce almost instantaneously by 90 %. In 1998, the government of Malaysia embarked on a pilot project to use incinerators to dispose MSW in four popular resort islands to see the effectiveness of this technique of waste disposal. Seven units of mini incinerators were installed on the islands and the local municipals were made responsible to manage and maintain.This project looked into the problems arises when incineration is used for MSW disposal on these islands. Data collected revealed that the plants were not properly managed and maintained. This was due to the lack of funds available for effective and smooth operation and the absence of highly expert personnel required to maintain the plant. Other factors that contribute to the inefficiency are inadequate air pollution control facilities and the infrastructure which do not condon the foul odour. Further research work need to be done to monitor the operation of these incinerators in order to explore its potential to dispose waste safely, effectively and cleanly.


2014 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 265-266 ◽  
Author(s):  
Baojing Gu ◽  
Mark A Sutton ◽  
Scott X Chang ◽  
Ying Ge ◽  
Jie Chang

2002 ◽  
Vol 46 (11-12) ◽  
pp. 51-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
G.-W. Li ◽  
H.-Y. Hu ◽  
J.-M. Hao ◽  
H.-Q. Zhang

The biodegradation of toluene and benzene in a biofilter using cylindrical activated carbon as the filler materials was studied. Three gas flow rates, i.e. 0.25, 0.50 and 0.75 m3/h, corresponding to empty bed gas residence of 75, 37.5 and 25 s, respectively, and total organic load lower than 400 g/m3.h were tested. The biofilter proved to be highly efficient in biodegradation of toluene and benzene, and toluene was more easily degraded than benzene. When each inlet load was lower than 150 g/m3.h, removal rate increased with inlet load and reached a maximum, which was 150 and 120 g/m−3.h for toluene and benzene, respectively. For inlet load higher than the maximum removal capacity conditions, the removal rate decreased with inlet load. Carbon dioxide concentration profile through the biofilter revealed that the mass ratios of carbon dioxide produced to the toluene and benzene removed were 2.15 g(CO2)/g(toluene) and 1.67 g(CO2)/g(benzene), which furthermore, confirmed the biodegradation performance in biofilter. The observation of biotic community demonstrated that the microbes consisted of bacillus, spore bacillus and fungi, of which the spore bacillus was dominant.


2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (12) ◽  
pp. 5367-5390 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Kelly ◽  
P. A. Makar ◽  
D. A. Plummer

Abstract. Ten year simulations of North American current and future air-quality were carried out using a regional air-quality model driven by a regional climate model, in turn driven by a general circulation model. Three separate summer scenarios were performed: a scenario representing the years 1997 to 2006, and two SRES A2 climate scenarios for the years 2041 to 2050. The first future climate scenario makes use of 2002 anthropogenic precursor emissions, and the second applied emissions scaling factors derived from the IPCC Representative Concentration Pathway 6 (RCP 6) scenario to estimate emissions for 2050 from existing 2020 projections. Ten-year averages of ozone and PM2.5 at North American monitoring network stations were used to evaluate the model's current chemical climatology. The model was found to have a similar performance for ozone as when driven by an operational weather forecast model. The PM2.5 predictions had larger negative biases, likely resulting from the absence of rainwater evaporation, and from sub-regional negative biases in the surface temperature fields, in the version of the climate model used here. The differences between the two future climate simulations and the current climate simulation were used to predict the changes to air-quality that might be expected in a future warmer climate, if anthropogenic precursor emissions remain constant at their current levels, versus if the RCP 6 emissions controls were adopted. Metrics of concentration, human health, and ecosystem damage were compared for the simulations. The scenario with future climate and current anthropogenic emissions resulted in worse air-quality than for current conditions – that is, the effect of climate-change alone, all other factors being similar, would be a worsening of air-quality. These effects are spatially inhomogeneous, with the magnitude and sign of the changes varying with region. The scenario with future climate and RCP 6 emissions for 2050 resulted in an improved air-quality, with decreases in key pollutant concentrations, in acute human mortality associated with air-pollution, and in sulphur and ozone deposition to the ecosystem. The positive outcomes of the RCP 6 emissions reductions were found to be of greater magnitude than the negative outcomes of climate change alone. The RCP 6 scenario however resulted in an increase in the deposition of nitrogen, as a result of increased ammonia emissions expected in that scenario, compared to current ammonia emissions levels. The results of the study raise the possibility that simultaneous reductions of greenhouse gases and air pollution precursors may further reduce air pollution levels, with the added benefits of an immediate reduction in the impacts of air pollution on human and ecosystem health. Further scenarios to investigate this possibility are therefore recommended.


2018 ◽  
Vol 154 ◽  
pp. 01005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fauzan Nazif ◽  
Mahmud Sudibandriyo

Indonesia is one of the countries with the highest levels of air pollution in the world. Air pollution in Indonesia, especially in Jakarta due to the number of private vehicles increased at least 10% every year. This air pollution can have an impact on public health. One effort to do as a protection of people health is to use a mask. Activated carbon can be coated to mask in order to improve the effectiveness in reducing the pollutants. One good material used as material for activated carbon is coconut shell. Selection of coconut shell as the raw material of activated carbon is also based on cellulose content of 26.06%, hemicellulose content 27.07% and a lignin content of 29.40% in the dry state. This research was done in some variation such as activation methods, activated carbon mass, and adhesive material types. Based on pollutants adsorption test, mask with 6 grams of activated carbon, chemically activated, and used TEOS as adhesive is the best variation that able to adsorb as much 76,25% of CO2 Pollutants. Mask made in this research, has saturation time as long as 4 hours under high CO2 concentration.


2011 ◽  
Vol 332-334 ◽  
pp. 1743-1746 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu Ke Yang ◽  
Hua Zhang ◽  
Shao Gang Jin

The major indoor air pollution-formaldehyde has been a serious threat to our lives to our lives, and accordingly the formaldehyde degradation has turned into a concerned issue of public. This paper has based on a number of degradation methods and combined the adsorption effect of activated carbon with the catalytic effect of MnO2 to remove formaldehyde. The results show that the Nano-MnO2 particles loaded the surface of activated carbon particles possesses smaller sizes, better dispersion and no agglomeration, and consequently the AC/MnO2 compounds degraded formaldehyde effectively.


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