4.6 Article

Innovative Formulations of Phosphate Glasses as Controlled-Release Fertilizers to Improve Tomato Crop Growth, Yield and Fruit Quality

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 26, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26133928

Keywords

phosphate glass; fertilizer; macronutrients; micronutrients; controlled-release; yield; tomato

Funding

  1. OCP Fondation [VAL-MES-01/2017]

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The study focused on three phosphate glass compositions with varying [K2O/(CaO+MgO)] ratios for controlled release fertilizers for tomato crops. It was found that increasing the [K2O/(CaO+MgO)] ratio led to higher dissolution rates and changes in glass properties. Agronomic valorization showed that VF1 and VF2 glass fertilizers improved soil mineral content and tomato performance, with VF2 being particularly effective. This highlights the potential of these smart fertilizers for large-scale application to enhance crop production and nutritional quality.
Three phosphate glass compositions, VF1, VF2, and VF3, containing macro and micronutrients with different [K2O/(CaO+MgO)] ratio, were formulated to be used as controlled release fertilizers for tomato crop, depending on their chemical durability in water and their propriety with respect to the standards of controlled-release fertilizers. This study investigated the influence of [K2O/(CaO+MgO)] ratio variation on glass properties. For this, the elaborated glasses have undergone a chemical characterization using inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectroscopy, a thermal characterization using differential thermal analysis, a physicochemical characterization based on density and molar volume measurements, and a structural characterization using Raman spectroscopy, Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy, and X-ray diffraction. In addition, the chemical durability was determined by measuring the percentage of weight loss and the pH. Results revealed that the glass structure and composition have the mean role in controlling the release of nutrients in water. By increasing [K2O/(CaO+MgO)] ratio, the dissolution rates of the glasses increased due to the shrinking in the rate of crosslinking between phosphate chains, accompanied with a diminution in transition and crystallization temperatures, and an increase in the molar volume. An agronomic valorization of VF1 and VF2 glass fertilizers, which showed dissolution profiles adequate to the criteria of controlled-release fertilizers, was carried out to evaluate their efficiency on tomato crops. These glass fertilizers improved soil mineral content and tomato performances in comparison to the control and NPK treatments with the distinction of VF2. The results highlight the effectiveness of these smart fertilizers toward their potential large-scale application to improve crop production and quality for high nutritional value foods.

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