4.8 Article

Coal fly ash is a major carbon flux in the Chang Jiang (Yangtze River) basin

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1921544118

关键词

coal; fly ash; carbon cycle; Chang Jiang (Yangtze River); sediment transport

资金

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2017YFD0800300]
  2. California Institute of Technology Geology Option Postdoctoral Fellowship
  3. National Ocean Sciences Accelerator Mass Spectrometry Laboratory Graduate Intern Fellowship
  4. Resnick Sustainability Institute

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The research found that the fossilized particulate organic carbon (FOCash) in fly ash, a byproduct of coal burning, has a significant flux in rivers like the Chang Jiang in China. This highly recalcitrant FOCash is difficult to oxidize, unlike the more labile FOCrock derived from shale. The high FOCash flux in the Chang Jiang was attributed to increased coal combustion and construction of dams, leading to a substantial impact of anthropogenic activities on the global riverine FOC flux to the oceans.
Fly ash-the residuum of coal burning-contains a considerable amount of fossilized particulate organic carbon (FOCash) that remains after high-temperature combustion. Fly ash leaks into natural environments and participates in the contemporary carbon cycle, but its reactivity and flux remained poorly understood. We characterized FOCash in the Chang Jiang (Yangtze River) basin, China, and quantified the riverine FOCash fluxes. Using Raman spectral analysis, ramped pyrolysis oxidation, and chemical oxidation, we found that FOCash is highly recalcitrant and unreactive, whereas shale-derived FOC (FOCrock) was much more labile and easily oxidized. By combining mass balance calculations and other estimates of fly ash input to rivers, we estimated that the flux of FOCash carried by the Chang Jiang was 0.21 to 0.42 Mt C center dot y-1 in 2007 to 2008-an amount equivalent to 37 to 72% of the total riverine FOC export. We attributed such high flux to the combination of increasing coal combustion that enhances FOCash production and the massive construction of dams in the basin that reduces the flux of FOCrock eroded from upstream mountainous areas. Using global ash data, a first-order estimate suggests that FOCash makes up to 16% of the present-day global riverine FOC flux to the oceans. This reflects a substantial impact of anthropogenic activities on the fluxes and burial of fossil organic carbon that has been made less reactive than the rocks from which it was derived.

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