0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Nanoplastics Sign in to save

Effects of soil grain size and solution chemistry on the transport of biochar nanoparticles

Frontiers in Environmental Science 2023 12 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Binoy Sarkar Hailong Wang, Wenke Zhang, Binoy Sarkar Binoy Sarkar Jian Gao, Bhupinder Pal Singh, Jun Meng, Jian Gao, Yuwei Huang, Hailong Wang, Binoy Sarkar Binoy Sarkar Binoy Sarkar Binoy Sarkar Binoy Sarkar Binoy Sarkar Hailong Wang, Yuwei Huang, Binoy Sarkar Binoy Sarkar Binoy Sarkar Binoy Sarkar Binoy Sarkar Binoy Sarkar Bhupinder Pal Singh, Hailong Wang, Hailong Wang, Hailong Wang, Hailong Wang, Xuanwei Zhou, Hailong Wang, Binoy Sarkar Binoy Sarkar Xuanwei Zhou, Wenfu Chen, Jian Gao, Wenfu Chen, Hailong Wang, Hailong Wang, Jian Gao, Binoy Sarkar Binoy Sarkar Hailong Wang, Jian Gao, Yunpeng Teng, Yunpeng Teng, Binoy Sarkar Hailong Wang, Hailong Wang, Hailong Wang, Hailong Wang, Wenfu Chen, Hailong Wang, Wenfu Chen, Binoy Sarkar Hailong Wang, Wenfu Chen, Wenfu Chen, Hailong Wang, Hailong Wang, Binoy Sarkar

Summary

Researchers investigated how soil grain size and solution chemistry affect the transport of biochar nanoparticles through soil, finding that both factors significantly influence mobility and that accurate transport predictions are essential for safely scaling up biochar soil applications.

Biochar nanoparticles (BC-NP) have attracted significant attention because of their unique environmental behavior, some of which could potentially limit large-scale field application of biochar. Accurate prediction of the fate and transportability of BC-NP in soil matrix is the key to evaluating their environmental influence. This study investigated the effects of soil grain size and environmentally relevant solution chemistry, such as ionic strength (cation concentration, 0.1 mM–50 mM; cation type, Na + , and Ca 2+ ), and humic acid (HA; 0–10 mg/L), on the transport behavior of BC-NP via systematic column experiments. The transportability of BC-NP in the soil-packed column decreased with decreasing soil grain size and was inversely proportional to soil clay content. At low cation concentrations (0.1–1.0 mM), a considerable proportion of BC-NP (15.95%–67.17%) penetrated the soil columns. Compared with Na + , Ca 2+ inhibited the transportability of BC-NP in the soil through a charge shielding effect. With increasing HA concentration, the transportability of BC-NP increased, likely due to an enhanced repulsion force between BC-NP and soil particles. However, at a high HA concentration (10 mg/L), Ca 2+ bridging reduced the transportability of BC-NP in the soil. Breakthrough curves of BC-NP were explained by the two-site kinetic retention model. The antagonistic effects of ionic strength and HA indicated that the transport behavior of BC-NP in the soil was governed by competitive effects of some environmental factors, including soil grain size, environmental solution chemistry, and natural organic matter content.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper