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Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service St. Paul, MN
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Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Mar 08, 2018

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Page 1: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Biochar Degradation in Soils:The overlooked processes

Kurt SpokasUnited States Department of AgricultureAgricultural Research Service St. Paul, MN

Page 2: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Biochar – Look to other Black Carbons

• Coal

There is still disagreement over the chemical structure of coal (Stefanova et al., 1993; Van Krevelen, 1993; Schumacher, 1997)

Function of original feedstock, conditions of digenesis, burial conditions, and post creation exposure events

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Page 3: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Biochar – Look to other Black CarbonsCoals:

Highly variable chemical structure

“Ranks” of coal based on volatile matter content

Peat Lignite Sub-bituminous Bituminous Anthracite Graphite>65 45-65 30-45 15-30 5-15 0-5

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Page 4: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Biochar Stability: Coal Microbial Stability History

•Over a 100 year history of research

•Potter (1908)• Initial observation of fungi degradation of lignite coal

•Galle (1910) • First isolated pure cultures of bacteria that degrade coal

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Page 5: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Biochar Stability: Coal Microbial Stability History

• Fakoussa (1981)“Liquefaction” of coal by microbes

Formation of colored liquids

• Cohen and Gabriele (1982) Wood-decaying fungi (white-rot and brown-rot) on coal form black liquid droplets

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Page 6: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Biochar Stability: Coal Microbial Stability History• 1920-30’s High use of charcoal/coal in agriculture

Lieske – 1929/1931 Application of to agricultural soils

Aim: Stimulation of fungi and bacteria

Thompson – 1933Use of charcoal/coal in animal feeding

+ others….

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Page 7: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Coal Degradation Mechanisms

A Alkaline SubstancesB BiocatalystsC ChelatorsD DetergentsE Easterases

ABCDE-mechanism of biological conversion of black carbon(Fakoussa, 1991)

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Page 8: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Charcoal Weathering• Chemical oxidation of charcoal has been known for a longtime

• Pechnin (1872)Moist ground charcoal losses are 10-25% from open air/moist storage

• Grooves and Thorp (1889) Degrades at 2% per week when exposed to moist air

• Engineer (London, UK; 1903) In the presence of saltwater the loss is reduced. • Stored in a brine solution for 10 years <0.1% lost

• Fritz & others (1907) Loss is a function of rank of coal and particle size

• Bruce (1940) The quicker the charcoal pile is made after formation the quicker it will disappear

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Page 9: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Biochar Stability – Weathering

Three Simultaneous Processes:

1) ChemicalBiochar is reactive !

• Chemisorption of oxygen to surface (Puri, 1958)

• Self-combustion properties of charcoal• Exothermic reaction with oxygen/water vapor

Self Heating (12- 16 cal/g released with H2O )

2) Microbial

Emphasis of biochar degradation studies Different biochars are degraded by different bacteria at different rates

• Quality of Biochar• Quality of Soil Microbial Communities

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Page 10: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Missing Process: 3) Physical DegradationVital in the formation of soils

Parent Rock Soil 10

Page 11: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Black Carbon disappearance has been mentioned…• Fungi can degrade BC to dissolvable components

Hockaday et al. (2007)

Microbial aided disintegration –

Condensed aromatic compounds observed in soil pore water, groundwater, and river water

Jaffe et al. (2013) – Dissolved black carbon into surface waters

Possible explanation for disappearance of BC

• Swelling of charcoal to the presence of water and water vapor Bangham (1932)

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Page 12: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Biochar – Looking at microscopic phenomenon

• JEOL 6500 SEM

• Chemical analysis • Energy dispersive spectrometer

(EDS). • Thermo-Noran Vantage system

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Page 13: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Biochar Rinsing

Fresh Biochar

“Rinsed”

24 hr. reciprocal shaking

(60 cycle min-1)

Filtrate evaporated on

SEM mount (EDS Analysis)

1:20 BC:Water

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Page 14: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Hardwood Slow Pyrolysis Biochar (550 oC)

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• “Fresh” Biochar

Page 15: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Hardwood Slow Pyrolysis Biochar (550 oC)

Footer text here15

• “Fresh” “Rinsed”

Page 16: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Rinsed Hardwood Slow Pyrolysis Biochar (550 oC)

Footer text here16

Page 17: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Physical Breakdown

“Sink-hole” formation

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Page 18: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Physical Breakdown

Graphite sheet failures

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Page 19: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Physical Weathering – Analogies

Utah (Goblin Valley)

Page 20: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Physical Weathering – Analogies

Utah (Goblin Valley)Surface of Washed Poultry Litter BC (350 oC)

Page 21: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Physical Weathering – Analogies

Utah (Goblin Valley)

Page 22: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Physical Weathering – Analogies

Utah (Goblin Valley) Surface of Washed Poultry Litter BC (350 oC)

Page 23: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Biochar C loss amounts (% of original C)

Physical breakdown of the biochar accounts for 3 orders of magnitude higher losses than microbial degradation(24 hr physical – 100d microbial)

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0.001

0.01

0.1

1

10

100

Lost in Solution Gas Production

% B

C-Ca

rbon

Los

t

PL

PC

Swine

Page 24: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Evaporated Rinse Solution

Micron and nanoscale biochar particles in rinse water

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Page 25: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Why important ?

• Uptake by plant roots & animal cells depends on chemistry of dissolved nanoscalefragments

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Page 26: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Why important ?

• Uptake by plant roots & animal cells depends on chemistry of dissolved fragments

• Plant growth increased in the presence of nano-sized charcoal particles

• Differential genetic expression between seedlings• Aquaporins – water channeling gene• Plant responses to environmental stresses

Carbon Nanotubes Induce Growth Enhancement of Tobacco Cells, ACS Nano, 2012, 6 (3), pp 2128–2135. DOI: 10.1021/nn204643g

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Page 27: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

Implications• Biochar is prone to physical degradation

C loss from BCAlso helps explains the

“black carbon paradox”• However:

•Soil was also observed to stabilize BC particle

• Potential need for smaller particles

• Mechanical strength• Amorphous stronger than “graphitic sheets”

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Page 28: Biochar Degradation in Soils - Illinois Biochar Website conference/Spokas_Kurt...Biochar Degradation in Soils: The overlooked processes Kurt Spokas United States Department of Agriculture

AcknowledgementsPartial funding provided through:

MN Corn Growers and Research Promotion BoardAURI (Agricultural Utilization Research Institute)

IREE (Univ. of Minnesota)MN Department of Agriculture

USDA