Summary: | Control of gaseous emissions from livestock operations is needed to ensure compliance with environmental regulations and sustainability of the industry. The focus of this research was to mitigate livestock odor emissions with UV light. Effects of the UV dose, wavelength, TiO<sub>2</sub> catalyst, air temperature, and relative humidity were tested at lab scale on a synthetic mixture of nine odorous volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and real poultry manure offgas. Results show that it was feasible to control odorous VOCs with both photolysis and photocatalysis (synthetic VOCs mixture) and with photocatalysis (manure offgas). The treatment effectiveness <i>R</i> (defined as % conversion), was proportional to the light intensity for synthetic VOCs mixtures and followed an order of UV<sub>185+254</sub> + TiO<sub>2</sub> > UV<sub>254</sub> + TiO<sub>2</sub> > UV<sub>185+254</sub>; no catalyst > UV<sub>254</sub>; no catalyst. VOC conversion <i>R</i> > 80% was achieved when light energy was >~60 J L<sup>−1</sup>. The use of deep UV (UV<sub>185+254</sub>) improved the <i>R,</i> particularly when photolysis was the primary treatment. Odor removal up to ~80% was also observed for a synthetic VOCs mixture, and actual poultry manure offgas. Scale-up studies are warranted.
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