4.7 Article

Binding characteristics of humic substances with Cu and Zn in response to inorganic mineral additives during swine manure composting

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 305, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.114387

Keywords

Heavy metal; Organic matter; Bioavailability; Sequential extraction; Humification

Funding

  1. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA23070500]
  2. Project of Natural Science Foundation of Jilin Province [20200201217JC]

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Composting is effective in recycling livestock manure into organic fertilizer, with humic substances playing a key role in regulating heavy metal distribution. The study found that organic matter and fulvic acids were critical factors in explaining the redistribution of copper and zinc, with over 80% of the metals complexed with fulvic acids. Exogenous additives like phosphate rock and boron waste enhanced copper conversion but had limited influence on zinc due to weaker binding relationships.
Composting is suitable for recycling livestock manure into valuable organic fertilizer, which can improve soil quality while mitigating potential risk of heavy metal pollution. Humic substances (HS) in compost have been demonstrated to play a key role in regulating the redistribution of heavy metal fractions. However, limited direct information have been reported on how different components of HS complexes with heavy metals to affect their bioavailability during composting. In this study, sequential extraction procedures (H2O, KCl, Na4P2O7, NaOH and HNO3) were used to assess the characteristics that HS bound with Cu and Zn during composting of swine manure and straw added either 5% boron waste (BW) or 5% phosphate rock (PR). Organically complexed fraction extracted by Na4P2O7 contained only 33-41% of the Cu but most of the Zn (81-87%). During composting, initially mobile fractions of Cu and Zn (extracted by H2O or KCl) changed into more stable fractions (extracted by NaOH and HNO3), and both organic matter and fulvic acids (FA) were identified as critical factors to explain this redistribution based on redundancy analysis. Over 80% of Cu and Zn were complexed with FA of HS. However, exogenous additives (phosphate rock and boron waste) enhanced Cu conversion by promoting humification (Humic acid/Fulvic acids, HA/FA) whereas they had limited influence on Zn, due to the relatively weak binding relationship between Zn and HA.

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