Organic fertilizer refers to the use of crop straw and animal manure as the main raw materials, inoculated with microbial composite agents, and using biochemical processes and microbial technology to completely kill pathogenic bacteria and parasite eggs, eliminate odor, use microorganisms to decompose organic matter, convert macromolecular substances into small components, and then achieve the purpose of deodorization, maturation, dehydration, and drying, making organic fertilizer with excellent physical properties, carbon nitrogen ratio, and fertilizer efficiency. Bioorganic fertilizer belongs to the category of biological fertilizers, and its differences from microbial inoculants mainly lie in aspects such as bacterial strains, production industry, and application technology.
The small sheep manure complete set organic fertilizer equipment can be divided into two stages in the manufacturing process of organic fertilizer: fermentation stage and granulation stage. Organic solid waste such as animal manure in the composting and fermentation section is fermented, decomposed, dehydrated, and deodorized before being crushed and sieved to form (powdered) bio organic fertilizer. The sieved powdered bio organic matter enters the granulation section. During the granulation process, the matured material is granulated, cooled, screened, and packaged to form granular bio organic fertilizer.
The small sheep manure complete set of organic fertilizer equipment is a complete set of equipment that uses sheep manure as raw material to process organic fertilizer. The sheep manure treatment machine can first pump the sheep manure from the manure toilet into the equipment, and after dehydration by the equipment, the moisture content after treatment is about 40%. Crops such as straw and rice bran (including NPK) can also be used as fillers, and then sprinkled with biological bacterial agents. 1KG of bacterial agents mixed with 20KG of water are transported into the raw materials, which can ferment 1 ton of raw materials. Flip and toss once every 1-2 days, and it usually takes 7-10 days to fully decompose.