Biochar Particle Size and Post-Pyrolysis Mechanical Processing Affect Soil pH, Water Retention Capacity, and Plant Performance
It has become common practice in soil applications of biochar to use ground and/or sieved material to reduce particle size and so enhance mixing and surface contact between soils and char particles. Smaller particle sizes of biochars have been suggested to enhance liming effects and nutrient exchang...
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doaj-5429bccc3ec14172a72830421457daa92020-11-24T21:15:58ZengMDPI AGSoil Systems2571-87892019-02-01311410.3390/soilsystems3010014soilsystems3010014Biochar Particle Size and Post-Pyrolysis Mechanical Processing Affect Soil pH, Water Retention Capacity, and Plant PerformanceWenxi Liao0Sean C. Thomas1University of Toronto, Faculty of Forestry, 33 Willcocks St., Toronto, ON M5S 3B3, CanadaUniversity of Toronto, Faculty of Forestry, 33 Willcocks St., Toronto, ON M5S 3B3, CanadaIt has become common practice in soil applications of biochar to use ground and/or sieved material to reduce particle size and so enhance mixing and surface contact between soils and char particles. Smaller particle sizes of biochars have been suggested to enhance liming effects and nutrient exchange, and potentially to increase water storage capacity; however, data remains scarce and effects on plant growth responses have not been examined. We manipulated biochar particle size by sieving or grinding to generate particles in two size ranges (0.06⁻0.5 mm and 2⁻4 mm), and examined effects on soil pH, soil water retention, and plant physiological and growth performance of two test species (ryegrass: <i>Lolium multiflorum</i>, and velvetleaf: <i>Abutilon theophrasti</i>) grown in a granitic sand culture. The small particle sieved biochar had the largest liming effect, increasing substrate pH values by an additional ~0.3 pH units compared to other biochars. Small particle size biochar showed enhanced water retention capacity, and sieved biochars showed 91%⁻258% larger water retention capacity than ground biochars of similar particle size, likely because sieved particles were more elongated than ground particles, and thus increased soil interpore volume. The two plant species tested showed distinct patterns of response to biochar treatments: ryegrass showed a better growth response to large biochar particles, while velvetleaf showed the highest response to the small, sieved biochar treatment. We show for the first time that post-processing of biochars by sieving and grinding has distinct effects on biochar chemical and physical properties, and that resulting differences in properties have large but strongly species-specific effects on plant performance in biochar-amended substrates.https://www.mdpi.com/2571-8789/3/1/14biocharparticle geometryparticle sizepHwater retention |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Wenxi Liao Sean C. Thomas |
spellingShingle |
Wenxi Liao Sean C. Thomas Biochar Particle Size and Post-Pyrolysis Mechanical Processing Affect Soil pH, Water Retention Capacity, and Plant Performance Soil Systems biochar particle geometry particle size pH water retention |
author_facet |
Wenxi Liao Sean C. Thomas |
author_sort |
Wenxi Liao |
title |
Biochar Particle Size and Post-Pyrolysis Mechanical Processing Affect Soil pH, Water Retention Capacity, and Plant Performance |
title_short |
Biochar Particle Size and Post-Pyrolysis Mechanical Processing Affect Soil pH, Water Retention Capacity, and Plant Performance |
title_full |
Biochar Particle Size and Post-Pyrolysis Mechanical Processing Affect Soil pH, Water Retention Capacity, and Plant Performance |
title_fullStr |
Biochar Particle Size and Post-Pyrolysis Mechanical Processing Affect Soil pH, Water Retention Capacity, and Plant Performance |
title_full_unstemmed |
Biochar Particle Size and Post-Pyrolysis Mechanical Processing Affect Soil pH, Water Retention Capacity, and Plant Performance |
title_sort |
biochar particle size and post-pyrolysis mechanical processing affect soil ph, water retention capacity, and plant performance |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Soil Systems |
issn |
2571-8789 |
publishDate |
2019-02-01 |
description |
It has become common practice in soil applications of biochar to use ground and/or sieved material to reduce particle size and so enhance mixing and surface contact between soils and char particles. Smaller particle sizes of biochars have been suggested to enhance liming effects and nutrient exchange, and potentially to increase water storage capacity; however, data remains scarce and effects on plant growth responses have not been examined. We manipulated biochar particle size by sieving or grinding to generate particles in two size ranges (0.06⁻0.5 mm and 2⁻4 mm), and examined effects on soil pH, soil water retention, and plant physiological and growth performance of two test species (ryegrass: <i>Lolium multiflorum</i>, and velvetleaf: <i>Abutilon theophrasti</i>) grown in a granitic sand culture. The small particle sieved biochar had the largest liming effect, increasing substrate pH values by an additional ~0.3 pH units compared to other biochars. Small particle size biochar showed enhanced water retention capacity, and sieved biochars showed 91%⁻258% larger water retention capacity than ground biochars of similar particle size, likely because sieved particles were more elongated than ground particles, and thus increased soil interpore volume. The two plant species tested showed distinct patterns of response to biochar treatments: ryegrass showed a better growth response to large biochar particles, while velvetleaf showed the highest response to the small, sieved biochar treatment. We show for the first time that post-processing of biochars by sieving and grinding has distinct effects on biochar chemical and physical properties, and that resulting differences in properties have large but strongly species-specific effects on plant performance in biochar-amended substrates. |
topic |
biochar particle geometry particle size pH water retention |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2571-8789/3/1/14 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT wenxiliao biocharparticlesizeandpostpyrolysismechanicalprocessingaffectsoilphwaterretentioncapacityandplantperformance AT seancthomas biocharparticlesizeandpostpyrolysismechanicalprocessingaffectsoilphwaterretentioncapacityandplantperformance |
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