Effect of pyrochar and hydrochar amendments on the mineralization of the herbicide isoproturon in an agricultural soil

•Biochar amendments lower IPU mineralization irrespective of feedstock materials.•Higher effect of char addition rate and production process than of the feedstocks.•Low amounts of NER in soil amended with hydrochar, in contrast to pyrochar.•Positive correlation between biochar degradation and IPU mi...

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Published inChemosphere (Oxford) Vol. 134; pp. 528 - 535
Main Authors Eibisch, Nina, Schroll, Reiner, Fuß, Roland
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Elsevier Ltd 01.09.2015
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Summary:•Biochar amendments lower IPU mineralization irrespective of feedstock materials.•Higher effect of char addition rate and production process than of the feedstocks.•Low amounts of NER in soil amended with hydrochar, in contrast to pyrochar.•Positive correlation between biochar degradation and IPU mineralization.•Good, sustainable IPU bioaccessibility in hydrochar amended soil. Carbon (C)-rich, solid products from pyrolysis (pyrochars) and hydrothermal carbonization (HTC, hydrochars) are expected to reduce the bioavailability and bioaccessibility of pesticides as side effect of soil addition. To compare effects of different feedstocks (digestate, miscanthus, woodchips) and production processes (pyrolysis at 750°C, HTC at 200°C and 250°C), 14C-labeled isoproturon (IPU) was applied at 0.75kgha−1 to loamy sand amended either with 0.5% or 5% pyrochars or hydrochars, which was then incubated for 50d. Mineralization of IPU was measured as 14C–CO2 released from soil-char composites. Pore-water and methanol extractable 14C-IPU was quantified as well as non-extractable 14C-residues (NER). Furthermore, C mineralization of pyrochars, hydrochars and feedstocks was studied to assess the relationship between IPU bioaccessibility and char decomposability. In pure soil, 8.1% of applied IPU was mineralized after 50d. This was reduced more strongly in pyrochar treatments (81±6% reduction) than in hydrochar treatments (56±25% reduction). Different feedstocks had no significantly different effect when 5% char was added, but their effect was significant and dependent on the production process in 0.5% amendments. Pesticide binding can occur by surface sorption as well as by diffusion and subsequent occlusion in micropores. The latter can be expected to result in high amounts of NER, as it was observed in the pyrochar treatments. Hydrochars were less stable than pyrochars and contained lower amounts of NER. Thus, in hydrochar amended soils, better accessibility of IPU to microbial degradation may be a result of full char decomposition within decades ensuring controlled pesticide degradation.
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content type line 23
ISSN:0045-6535
1879-1298
DOI:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2014.11.074