Abstract

<p>The physical properties of biochar have been shown to dramatically influence its performance as a soil amendment. Biochar particle size is one of key parameters, as it controls its specific surface area, shape, and pore distribution. Therefore, this study assessed the role of biochar particle size and hydrophobicity in controlling soil water movement and retention. Softwood pellet biochar in five particle size ranges (>2 mm, 2 – 0.5 mm, 0.5 – 0.25 mm, 0.25 – 0.063mm and <0.063 mm) was used for the experiment. These particle sizes were tested on 2 soil types (sandy loam and loamy sand) at four different application rates (1, 2, 4 and 8%).  Our results showed that biochar hydrophobicity increased with decreasing biochar particle size, leading to a reduction in its water retention capacity. The effect of biochar on soil hydraulic properties varied with different rate of application and particle sizes. With increasing rate of application, water retention increased while hydraulic conductivity decreased. Water content at field capacity, permanent wilting point, and the available water content increased with increasing biochar particle size. The soil hydraulic conductivity increased with decreasing particle sizes apart from biochar particles <0.063mm which showed a significant (p≤0.05) decrease compared to the larger particle sizes. The results clearly showed that both biochar intra-porosity and inter-porosity are important factors affecting soil hydraulic properties. Biochar interpores affected mainly hydraulic conductivity, both interpores and intrapores controlled soil water retention properties. Our results suggest that for a more effective increase in soil water retention in sandy loam and loamy sand, the use of hydrophilic biochar with high intra-porosity is recommended.</p>

Highlights

  • Biochar is a carbon-rich material obtained from the pyrolysis of organic biomass

  • The pore size distribution results showed that the 2–0.5 mm biochar-amended soil had a slightly higher proportion of mesopores compared to the >2 mm biochar-amended soil; the θawc for >2 mm was greater than that of 2–0.5 mm. This further shows that biochar intraporosity plays a greater role in controlling plant available water, implying that the use of biochar with high intraporosity will be more efficient in coarse-textured soils with low water retention capacity

  • We assessed the role of biochar particle size and hydrophobicity in controlling soil water movement and retention

Read more

Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Biochar is a carbon-rich material obtained from the pyrolysis of organic biomass. Its recalcitrant nature makes it a unique soil amendment because it can store carbon for hundreds to thousands of years (Wang, Xiong, & Kuzyakov, 2016). Some have found that biochar increases soil water retention (de Duarte, Glaser, de Lima, & Cerri, 2019b; Kameyama, Miyamoto, & Shiono, 2014; Obia, Mulder, Martinsen, Cornelissen, & Børresen, 2016; Villagra-Mendoza & Horn, 2018), others have not observed any significant difference in soil water retention with addition of biochar (Hardie, Clothier, Bound, Oliver, & Close, 2014; Jeffery et al, 2015; Wiersma, van der Ploeg, Sauren, & Stoof, 2020) These variations in observed results are largely due to the differences in biochar properties (Bouqbis et al, 2018; Mašek, Brownsort, Cross, & Sohi, 2013; Schnee, Knauth, Hapca, Otten, & Eickhorst, 2016; Sun, He, Pan, & Zhang, 2017). Some studies reported an increase in soil water retention with the use of fine biochar (0.5–0.06 mm) (de Duarte, Glaser, & Cerri, 2019a; Liao & Thomas, 2019), another study by Liu et al (2017) reported a reduction in soil water retention with the use of fine biochar (

| METHODOLOGY
| RESULTS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
| CONCLUSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call