4.7 Article

Transport and retention of biochar nanoparticles in a paddy soil under environmentally-relevant solution chemistry conditions

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 230, Issue -, Pages 540-549

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2017.06.101

Keywords

Biochar nanoparticles; Ionic strength and electrolyte type; Humic acid; Soil; Transport

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21537002, 21607099, 21377081]
  2. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation
  3. China Ministry of Environmental Protection [201509035]

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Land application of biochar has been increasingly recommended as a powerful strategy for carbon sequestration and soil remediation. However, the biochar particles, especially those in the nanoscale range, may migrate or carry the inherent contaminants along the soil profile, posing a potential risk to the groundwater. This study investigated the transport and retention of wood chip-derived biochar nanoparticles (NPs) in water-saturated columns packed with a paddy soil. The environmentally-relevant soil solution chemistry including ionic strength (0.10-50 mM), electrolyte type (NaCl and CaCl2), and natural organic matter (0-10 mg L-1 humic acid) were tested to elucidate their effects on the biochar NPs transport. Higher mobility of biochar NPs was observed in the soil at lower ionic strengths, with CaCl2 electrolyte being more effective than NaCl in decreasing biochar NPs transport. The retained biochar NPs in NaCl was re-entrained (-57.7%) upon lowering transient pore-water ionic strength, indicating that biochar NPs were reversibly retained in the secondary minimum. In contrast, negligible re-entrainment of biochar NPs occurred in CaCl2 due to the primary minimum and/or particle aggregation. Humic acid increased the mobility of biochar NPs, likely due to enhanced electrosteric repulsive interactions. The transport behaviors of biochar NPs can be well interpreted by a two-site kinetic retention model that assumes reversible retention for one site, and irreversible retention for the other site. Our findings indicated that the transport of wood chip biochar NPs is significant in the paddy soil, highlighting the importance of understanding the mobility of biochar NPs in natural soils for accurately assessing their environmental impacts. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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