4.7 Article

Creating new value of blast furnace slag as soil amendment to mitigate methane emission and improve rice cropping environments

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 806, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.150961

Keywords

Blast furnace slag; Silicate fertilizer; Methane; Soil quality; Rice quality

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Ministry of Education of the Republic of Korea [NRF2015R1A6A1A0303141331]
  2. POSCO (Pohang Iron and Steel Co., Ltd.) [2020Z065]

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Silicate fertilizer can effectively suppress CH4 emissions, increase rice grain yield and quality, improve soil properties, and have beneficial effects on rice paddy environments in the long term without accumulation of hazardous materials.
Blast furnace slag (BFS), a by-product of iron making, has been utilized as silicate fertilizer in Korean and Japanese rice paddy. Silicate fertilizer, which has high contents of active iron and manganese as electron acceptor, was newly known to suppress methane (CH4) emission in flooded rice paddies, but the effect of its long-term application on rice cropping environment is still debatable. To evaluate the effect of silicate fertilization on suppressing CH4 emissions, the changes of CH4 index, indicating the ratio (%) of seasonal CH4 flux at the silicate fertilization treatment to that at the control, were generalized using the global investigation data (42 observations from 8 fields in Bangladesh, China, and Korea). Seasonal CH4 fluxes significantly decreased with increasing silicate fertilization levels. In CH4 index changes, 15 Mg ha(-1) of silicate fertilizer application (the recommended level of rice cultivation in Korea) decreased by 15% of seasonal CH4 fluxes. Rice grain yield highly increased with increasing silicate fertilization rates and maximized at approximately 4 Mg ha(-1) with 18% higher than no-silicate fertilization due to overall improvement of soil properties. To evaluate the long-term silicate fertilization effect on rice cropping environments, silicate (1.5 Mg ha(-1) year(-1)) and non-silicate fertilization treatments were installed in a typical temperate-monsoon climate paddy field in South Korea in 1990. Periodic silicate fertilization significantly increased rice grain productivity by an average of 14% over the control for the last 28 years. This fertilization evidently improved rice quality without changes in chemical quality. Consecutive silicate fertilization effectively improved soil physical and chemical properties but did not increase any acid extractable heavy metal concentration in soil. In conclusion, BFS as silicate fertilizer could be a beneficial amendment to mitigate CH4 emission in the rice paddy and improve soil properties and rice productivity and quality without hazardous material accumulation. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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