Dynamics of charcoal alteration in a tropical biome: a biochar-based study

Pyrogenic carbon (PyC) is a polyaromatic residue of the incomplete combustion of biomass or fossil fuels. There is a growing recognition that PyC forms an important part of carbon budgets, due to production rates of 116–385 Tg C yr, and the size and ubiquity of PyC stocks in global carbon reservoirs...

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Main Authors: Ascough, Philippa, Bird, Michael, Meredith, William, Snape, Colin E., Large, David R., Tilston, Emma, Apperley, David, Bernabé, Ana, Shen, Licheng
Format: Article
Published: Frontiers Media 2018
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Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52239/
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author Ascough, Philippa
Bird, Michael
Meredith, William
Snape, Colin E.
Large, David R.
Tilston, Emma
Apperley, David
Bernabé, Ana
Shen, Licheng
author_facet Ascough, Philippa
Bird, Michael
Meredith, William
Snape, Colin E.
Large, David R.
Tilston, Emma
Apperley, David
Bernabé, Ana
Shen, Licheng
author_sort Ascough, Philippa
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Pyrogenic carbon (PyC) is a polyaromatic residue of the incomplete combustion of biomass or fossil fuels. There is a growing recognition that PyC forms an important part of carbon budgets, due to production rates of 116–385 Tg C yr, and the size and ubiquity of PyC stocks in global carbon reservoirs. At least a proportion of PyC exists in a highly recalcitrant chemical form, raising the prospect of long-term carbon sequestration through soil amendment with “biochar,” which is generally produced with the aim of making a particularly recalcitrant form of PyC. However, there is growing evidence that some PyC, including biochar, can be both physically and chemically altered and degraded upon exposure to the environment over annual timescales, yet there is a lack of information concerning the mechanisms and determining factors of degradation. Here, we investigate three main factors; production temperature, feedstock composition, and the characteristics of the environment to which the material is exposed (e.g., pH, organic matter composition, oxygen availability) by analysis of biochar samples in a litterbag experiment before and after a year-long field study in the tropical rainforests of northeast Australia. We find that non-lignocellulosic feedstock has lower aromaticity, plus lower O/C and H/C ratios for a given temperature, and consequently lower carbon sequestration potential. The rate at which samples are altered is production temperature-dependant; however even in the highest temperature samples loss of the semi-labile aromatic carbon component is observed over 1 year. The results of 13C-MAS-NMR measurements suggest that direct oxygenation of aromatic structures may be even more important than carboxylation in environmental alteration of biochar (as a subset of PyC). There is a clear effect of depositional environment on biochar alteration even after the relatively short timescale of this study, as changes are most extensive in the most oxygenated material that was exposed on the soil surface. This is most likely the result of mineral ingress and colonization by soil microbiota. Consequently, oxygen availability and physical or chemical protection from sunlight and/or rainwater is vital in determining the alteration trajectory of this material.
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spelling nottingham-522392020-05-04T19:39:36Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52239/ Dynamics of charcoal alteration in a tropical biome: a biochar-based study Ascough, Philippa Bird, Michael Meredith, William Snape, Colin E. Large, David R. Tilston, Emma Apperley, David Bernabé, Ana Shen, Licheng Pyrogenic carbon (PyC) is a polyaromatic residue of the incomplete combustion of biomass or fossil fuels. There is a growing recognition that PyC forms an important part of carbon budgets, due to production rates of 116–385 Tg C yr, and the size and ubiquity of PyC stocks in global carbon reservoirs. At least a proportion of PyC exists in a highly recalcitrant chemical form, raising the prospect of long-term carbon sequestration through soil amendment with “biochar,” which is generally produced with the aim of making a particularly recalcitrant form of PyC. However, there is growing evidence that some PyC, including biochar, can be both physically and chemically altered and degraded upon exposure to the environment over annual timescales, yet there is a lack of information concerning the mechanisms and determining factors of degradation. Here, we investigate three main factors; production temperature, feedstock composition, and the characteristics of the environment to which the material is exposed (e.g., pH, organic matter composition, oxygen availability) by analysis of biochar samples in a litterbag experiment before and after a year-long field study in the tropical rainforests of northeast Australia. We find that non-lignocellulosic feedstock has lower aromaticity, plus lower O/C and H/C ratios for a given temperature, and consequently lower carbon sequestration potential. The rate at which samples are altered is production temperature-dependant; however even in the highest temperature samples loss of the semi-labile aromatic carbon component is observed over 1 year. The results of 13C-MAS-NMR measurements suggest that direct oxygenation of aromatic structures may be even more important than carboxylation in environmental alteration of biochar (as a subset of PyC). There is a clear effect of depositional environment on biochar alteration even after the relatively short timescale of this study, as changes are most extensive in the most oxygenated material that was exposed on the soil surface. This is most likely the result of mineral ingress and colonization by soil microbiota. Consequently, oxygen availability and physical or chemical protection from sunlight and/or rainwater is vital in determining the alteration trajectory of this material. Frontiers Media 2018-06-04 Article PeerReviewed Ascough, Philippa, Bird, Michael, Meredith, William, Snape, Colin E., Large, David R., Tilston, Emma, Apperley, David, Bernabé, Ana and Shen, Licheng (2018) Dynamics of charcoal alteration in a tropical biome: a biochar-based study. Frontiers in Earth Science, 6 . 61/1-61/15. ISSN 2296-6463 Pyrogenic carbon; Black carbon; PAHs; Charcoal; Biochar https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2018.00061 doi:10.3389/feart.2018.00061 doi:10.3389/feart.2018.00061
spellingShingle Pyrogenic carbon; Black carbon; PAHs; Charcoal; Biochar
Ascough, Philippa
Bird, Michael
Meredith, William
Snape, Colin E.
Large, David R.
Tilston, Emma
Apperley, David
Bernabé, Ana
Shen, Licheng
Dynamics of charcoal alteration in a tropical biome: a biochar-based study
title Dynamics of charcoal alteration in a tropical biome: a biochar-based study
title_full Dynamics of charcoal alteration in a tropical biome: a biochar-based study
title_fullStr Dynamics of charcoal alteration in a tropical biome: a biochar-based study
title_full_unstemmed Dynamics of charcoal alteration in a tropical biome: a biochar-based study
title_short Dynamics of charcoal alteration in a tropical biome: a biochar-based study
title_sort dynamics of charcoal alteration in a tropical biome: a biochar-based study
topic Pyrogenic carbon; Black carbon; PAHs; Charcoal; Biochar
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52239/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52239/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52239/