Production and Composition of Pyrogenic Dissolved Organic Matter From a Logical Series of Laboratory-Generated Chars

Though pyrogenic carbon (pyC) has been assumed to be predominantly stable, degradation and transfers of pyC between various pools have been found to influence its cycling and longevity in the environment. Dissolution via leaching may be the main control on loss processes such as microbial or abiotic...

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Main Authors: Kyle W. Bostick, Andrew R. Zimmerman, Andrew. S. Wozniak, Siddhartha Mitra, Patrick G. Hatcher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-04-01
Series:Frontiers in Earth Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/feart.2018.00043/full
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spelling doaj-aaa61274ccb8460e816f459132bac9752020-11-24T22:35:00ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Earth Science2296-64632018-04-01610.3389/feart.2018.00043353455Production and Composition of Pyrogenic Dissolved Organic Matter From a Logical Series of Laboratory-Generated CharsKyle W. Bostick0Andrew R. Zimmerman1Andrew. S. Wozniak2Siddhartha Mitra3Patrick G. Hatcher4Department of Geological Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, United StatesDepartment of Geological Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, United StatesSchool of Marine Science and Policy, College of Earth, Ocean, and Environment, University of Delaware, Newark, DE, United StatesDepartment of Geological Sciences, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC, United StatesDepartment of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA, United StatesThough pyrogenic carbon (pyC) has been assumed to be predominantly stable, degradation and transfers of pyC between various pools have been found to influence its cycling and longevity in the environment. Dissolution via leaching may be the main control on loss processes such as microbial or abiotic oxidation, mineral sorption, or export to aquatic systems. Yet, little is known about the controls on pyrogenic dissolved organic matter (pyDOM) generation or composition. Here, the yield and composition of pyDOM generated through batch leaching of a thermal series of oak and grass biochars, as well as several non-pyrogenic reference materials, was compared to that of their parent solids. Over 17 daily leaching cycles, biochars made from oak at 250–650°C released decreasing amounts of C on both a weight (16.9–0.3%, respectively) and C yield basis (7.4–0.2% C, respectively). Aryl-C represented an estimated 32–82% of C in the parent solids (identified by 13C-NMR), but only 7–38% in the leachates (identified by 1H-NMR), though both increased with pyrolysis temperature. PyC, often operationally defined as condensed aromatic carbon (ConAC), was quantified using the benzenepolycarboxylic acid (BPCA) method. Tri- and tetra-carboxylated BPCAs were formed from non-pyrogenic reference materials, thus, only penta- and hexa-carboxylated BPCAs were used to derive a BPCA-C to ConAC conversion factor of 7.04. ConAC made up 24–57% of the pyrogenic solid C (excluding the 250°C biochar), but only about 9–23% of their respective leachates' DOC, though both proportions generally increased with pyrolysis temperature. Weighted BPCA compound distributions, or the BPCA Aromatic Condensation (BACon) Index, indicate that ConAC cluster size increased in pyrogenic solids but not in leachates. Additional evidence presented suggests that both aromatic cluster size and O-containing functional group contents in the pyrogenic solid control pyC solubility. Overall, pyDOM was found to be compositionally dissimilar from its parent chars and contained a complex mixture of organic compound groups. Thus, it is expected that estimates of dissolved pyC production and export, made only by detection of ConAC, are too low by factors of 4–11.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/feart.2018.00043/fulldissolved organic matter (DOM)pyrogenic carbonbiocharcharcoalbenzenepolycarboxylic acid (BPCA)leaching
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kyle W. Bostick
Andrew R. Zimmerman
Andrew. S. Wozniak
Siddhartha Mitra
Patrick G. Hatcher
spellingShingle Kyle W. Bostick
Andrew R. Zimmerman
Andrew. S. Wozniak
Siddhartha Mitra
Patrick G. Hatcher
Production and Composition of Pyrogenic Dissolved Organic Matter From a Logical Series of Laboratory-Generated Chars
Frontiers in Earth Science
dissolved organic matter (DOM)
pyrogenic carbon
biochar
charcoal
benzenepolycarboxylic acid (BPCA)
leaching
author_facet Kyle W. Bostick
Andrew R. Zimmerman
Andrew. S. Wozniak
Siddhartha Mitra
Patrick G. Hatcher
author_sort Kyle W. Bostick
title Production and Composition of Pyrogenic Dissolved Organic Matter From a Logical Series of Laboratory-Generated Chars
title_short Production and Composition of Pyrogenic Dissolved Organic Matter From a Logical Series of Laboratory-Generated Chars
title_full Production and Composition of Pyrogenic Dissolved Organic Matter From a Logical Series of Laboratory-Generated Chars
title_fullStr Production and Composition of Pyrogenic Dissolved Organic Matter From a Logical Series of Laboratory-Generated Chars
title_full_unstemmed Production and Composition of Pyrogenic Dissolved Organic Matter From a Logical Series of Laboratory-Generated Chars
title_sort production and composition of pyrogenic dissolved organic matter from a logical series of laboratory-generated chars
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Earth Science
issn 2296-6463
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Though pyrogenic carbon (pyC) has been assumed to be predominantly stable, degradation and transfers of pyC between various pools have been found to influence its cycling and longevity in the environment. Dissolution via leaching may be the main control on loss processes such as microbial or abiotic oxidation, mineral sorption, or export to aquatic systems. Yet, little is known about the controls on pyrogenic dissolved organic matter (pyDOM) generation or composition. Here, the yield and composition of pyDOM generated through batch leaching of a thermal series of oak and grass biochars, as well as several non-pyrogenic reference materials, was compared to that of their parent solids. Over 17 daily leaching cycles, biochars made from oak at 250–650°C released decreasing amounts of C on both a weight (16.9–0.3%, respectively) and C yield basis (7.4–0.2% C, respectively). Aryl-C represented an estimated 32–82% of C in the parent solids (identified by 13C-NMR), but only 7–38% in the leachates (identified by 1H-NMR), though both increased with pyrolysis temperature. PyC, often operationally defined as condensed aromatic carbon (ConAC), was quantified using the benzenepolycarboxylic acid (BPCA) method. Tri- and tetra-carboxylated BPCAs were formed from non-pyrogenic reference materials, thus, only penta- and hexa-carboxylated BPCAs were used to derive a BPCA-C to ConAC conversion factor of 7.04. ConAC made up 24–57% of the pyrogenic solid C (excluding the 250°C biochar), but only about 9–23% of their respective leachates' DOC, though both proportions generally increased with pyrolysis temperature. Weighted BPCA compound distributions, or the BPCA Aromatic Condensation (BACon) Index, indicate that ConAC cluster size increased in pyrogenic solids but not in leachates. Additional evidence presented suggests that both aromatic cluster size and O-containing functional group contents in the pyrogenic solid control pyC solubility. Overall, pyDOM was found to be compositionally dissimilar from its parent chars and contained a complex mixture of organic compound groups. Thus, it is expected that estimates of dissolved pyC production and export, made only by detection of ConAC, are too low by factors of 4–11.
topic dissolved organic matter (DOM)
pyrogenic carbon
biochar
charcoal
benzenepolycarboxylic acid (BPCA)
leaching
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/feart.2018.00043/full
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