Proxies for use in biochar decay models: Hydropyrolysis, electric conductivity, and H/Corg molar ratio.

Biochar is a carbon-rich material produced via pyrolysis that is increasingly recognized for its role in carbon sequestration, particularly through its application in agriculture and materials. However, accurately predicting the long-term persistence of biochar in the environment remains challenging...

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發表在:PLoS ONE
Main Authors: Nikolas Hagemann, Hans-Peter Schmidt, Thomas D Bucheli, Jannis Grafmüller, Silvio Vosswinkel, Volker Herdegen, William Meredith, Clement N Uguna, Colin E Snape
格式: Article
語言:英语
出版: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
在線閱讀:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0330206
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author Nikolas Hagemann
Hans-Peter Schmidt
Thomas D Bucheli
Jannis Grafmüller
Silvio Vosswinkel
Volker Herdegen
William Meredith
Clement N Uguna
Colin E Snape
author_facet Nikolas Hagemann
Hans-Peter Schmidt
Thomas D Bucheli
Jannis Grafmüller
Silvio Vosswinkel
Volker Herdegen
William Meredith
Clement N Uguna
Colin E Snape
author_sort Nikolas Hagemann
collection DOAJ
container_title PLoS ONE
description Biochar is a carbon-rich material produced via pyrolysis that is increasingly recognized for its role in carbon sequestration, particularly through its application in agriculture and materials. However, accurately predicting the long-term persistence of biochar in the environment remains challenging. While incubation trials have been widely used to assess biochar degradation, their extrapolation beyond centennial timescales is uncertain. In this study, we evaluate the consistency between three physicochemical characterization methods that are considered as proxies for biochar persistence-hydropyrolysis (HyPy), solid-state electric conductivity (SEC), and elemental analysis to obtain molar hydrogen:carbon ratios. We produced 42 biochars from straw and wood using a continuously operated pilot-scale auger reactor at temperatures ranging from 400 to 800 °C under otherwise constant pyrolysis conditions. We then systematically analyzed the elemental composition, SEC and the fraction of biochar carbon that is resistant to HyPy (BCHyPy). Hydropyrolysis eliminates all free and covalently bound non-aromatic species and all aromatic species consisting of up to seven fused rings. Our results confirm that BCHyPy content increases with pyrolysis temperature and stabilizes above 600-680 °C, reaching >90% of total carbon in high-temperature biochars. Similarly, SEC increased exponentially with pyrolysis severity, correlating strongly with BCHyPy and H/C molar ratio. The latter has so far been used to predict biochar persistence. Our findings from a controlled temperature series of biochars highlight that SEC and BCHyPy could be useful proxies for parameterizing multi-pool decay models of biochars produced in practice.
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spelling doaj-art-b3e7fcc97f2b4053b00a204cd9d040f32025-09-05T05:31:32ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01209e033020610.1371/journal.pone.0330206Proxies for use in biochar decay models: Hydropyrolysis, electric conductivity, and H/Corg molar ratio.Nikolas HagemannHans-Peter SchmidtThomas D BucheliJannis GrafmüllerSilvio VosswinkelVolker HerdegenWilliam MeredithClement N UgunaColin E SnapeBiochar is a carbon-rich material produced via pyrolysis that is increasingly recognized for its role in carbon sequestration, particularly through its application in agriculture and materials. However, accurately predicting the long-term persistence of biochar in the environment remains challenging. While incubation trials have been widely used to assess biochar degradation, their extrapolation beyond centennial timescales is uncertain. In this study, we evaluate the consistency between three physicochemical characterization methods that are considered as proxies for biochar persistence-hydropyrolysis (HyPy), solid-state electric conductivity (SEC), and elemental analysis to obtain molar hydrogen:carbon ratios. We produced 42 biochars from straw and wood using a continuously operated pilot-scale auger reactor at temperatures ranging from 400 to 800 °C under otherwise constant pyrolysis conditions. We then systematically analyzed the elemental composition, SEC and the fraction of biochar carbon that is resistant to HyPy (BCHyPy). Hydropyrolysis eliminates all free and covalently bound non-aromatic species and all aromatic species consisting of up to seven fused rings. Our results confirm that BCHyPy content increases with pyrolysis temperature and stabilizes above 600-680 °C, reaching >90% of total carbon in high-temperature biochars. Similarly, SEC increased exponentially with pyrolysis severity, correlating strongly with BCHyPy and H/C molar ratio. The latter has so far been used to predict biochar persistence. Our findings from a controlled temperature series of biochars highlight that SEC and BCHyPy could be useful proxies for parameterizing multi-pool decay models of biochars produced in practice.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0330206
spellingShingle Nikolas Hagemann
Hans-Peter Schmidt
Thomas D Bucheli
Jannis Grafmüller
Silvio Vosswinkel
Volker Herdegen
William Meredith
Clement N Uguna
Colin E Snape
Proxies for use in biochar decay models: Hydropyrolysis, electric conductivity, and H/Corg molar ratio.
title Proxies for use in biochar decay models: Hydropyrolysis, electric conductivity, and H/Corg molar ratio.
title_full Proxies for use in biochar decay models: Hydropyrolysis, electric conductivity, and H/Corg molar ratio.
title_fullStr Proxies for use in biochar decay models: Hydropyrolysis, electric conductivity, and H/Corg molar ratio.
title_full_unstemmed Proxies for use in biochar decay models: Hydropyrolysis, electric conductivity, and H/Corg molar ratio.
title_short Proxies for use in biochar decay models: Hydropyrolysis, electric conductivity, and H/Corg molar ratio.
title_sort proxies for use in biochar decay models hydropyrolysis electric conductivity and h corg molar ratio
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0330206
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