Phosphorus-assisted biomass thermal conversion: reducing carbon loss and improving biochar stability.

There is often over 50% carbon loss during the thermal conversion of biomass into biochar, leading to it controversy for the biochar formation as a carbon sequestration strategy. Sometimes the biochar also seems not to be stable enough due to physical, chemical, and biological reactions in soils. In...

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Main Authors: Ling Zhao, Xinde Cao, Wei Zheng, Yue Kan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4274024?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-d30df07749f44179a14ac7027d249c982020-11-25T01:44:40ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01912e11537310.1371/journal.pone.0115373Phosphorus-assisted biomass thermal conversion: reducing carbon loss and improving biochar stability.Ling ZhaoXinde CaoWei ZhengYue KanThere is often over 50% carbon loss during the thermal conversion of biomass into biochar, leading to it controversy for the biochar formation as a carbon sequestration strategy. Sometimes the biochar also seems not to be stable enough due to physical, chemical, and biological reactions in soils. In this study, three phosphorus-bearing materials, H3PO4, phosphate rock tailing (PRT), and triple superphosphate (TSP), were used as additives to wheat straw with a ratio of 1: 0.4-0.8 for biochar production at 500°C, aiming to alleviate carbon loss during pyrolysis and to increase biochar-C stabilization. All these additives remarkably increased the biochar yield from 31.7% (unmodified biochar) to 46.9%-56.9% (modified biochars). Carbon loss during pyrolysis was reduced from 51.7% to 35.5%-47.7%. Thermogravimetric analysis curves showed that the additives had no effect on thermal stability of biochar but did enhance its oxidative stability. Microbial mineralization was obviously reduced in the modified biochar, especially in the TSP-BC, in which the total CO2 emission during 60-d incubation was reduced by 67.8%, compared to the unmodified biochar. Enhancement of carbon retention and biochar stability was probably due to the formation of meta-phosphate or C-O-PO3, which could either form a physical layer to hinder the contact of C with O2 and bacteria, or occupy the active sites of the C band. Our results indicate that pre-treating biomass with phosphors-bearing materials is effective for reducing carbon loss during pyrolysis and for increasing biochar stabilization, which provides a novel method by which biochar can be designed to improve the carbon sequestration capacity.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4274024?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ling Zhao
Xinde Cao
Wei Zheng
Yue Kan
spellingShingle Ling Zhao
Xinde Cao
Wei Zheng
Yue Kan
Phosphorus-assisted biomass thermal conversion: reducing carbon loss and improving biochar stability.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Ling Zhao
Xinde Cao
Wei Zheng
Yue Kan
author_sort Ling Zhao
title Phosphorus-assisted biomass thermal conversion: reducing carbon loss and improving biochar stability.
title_short Phosphorus-assisted biomass thermal conversion: reducing carbon loss and improving biochar stability.
title_full Phosphorus-assisted biomass thermal conversion: reducing carbon loss and improving biochar stability.
title_fullStr Phosphorus-assisted biomass thermal conversion: reducing carbon loss and improving biochar stability.
title_full_unstemmed Phosphorus-assisted biomass thermal conversion: reducing carbon loss and improving biochar stability.
title_sort phosphorus-assisted biomass thermal conversion: reducing carbon loss and improving biochar stability.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description There is often over 50% carbon loss during the thermal conversion of biomass into biochar, leading to it controversy for the biochar formation as a carbon sequestration strategy. Sometimes the biochar also seems not to be stable enough due to physical, chemical, and biological reactions in soils. In this study, three phosphorus-bearing materials, H3PO4, phosphate rock tailing (PRT), and triple superphosphate (TSP), were used as additives to wheat straw with a ratio of 1: 0.4-0.8 for biochar production at 500°C, aiming to alleviate carbon loss during pyrolysis and to increase biochar-C stabilization. All these additives remarkably increased the biochar yield from 31.7% (unmodified biochar) to 46.9%-56.9% (modified biochars). Carbon loss during pyrolysis was reduced from 51.7% to 35.5%-47.7%. Thermogravimetric analysis curves showed that the additives had no effect on thermal stability of biochar but did enhance its oxidative stability. Microbial mineralization was obviously reduced in the modified biochar, especially in the TSP-BC, in which the total CO2 emission during 60-d incubation was reduced by 67.8%, compared to the unmodified biochar. Enhancement of carbon retention and biochar stability was probably due to the formation of meta-phosphate or C-O-PO3, which could either form a physical layer to hinder the contact of C with O2 and bacteria, or occupy the active sites of the C band. Our results indicate that pre-treating biomass with phosphors-bearing materials is effective for reducing carbon loss during pyrolysis and for increasing biochar stabilization, which provides a novel method by which biochar can be designed to improve the carbon sequestration capacity.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4274024?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT lingzhao phosphorusassistedbiomassthermalconversionreducingcarbonlossandimprovingbiocharstability
AT xindecao phosphorusassistedbiomassthermalconversionreducingcarbonlossandimprovingbiocharstability
AT weizheng phosphorusassistedbiomassthermalconversionreducingcarbonlossandimprovingbiocharstability
AT yuekan phosphorusassistedbiomassthermalconversionreducingcarbonlossandimprovingbiocharstability
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