Urea Impregnated Biochar to Minimize Nutrients Loss in Paddy Soils

Authors

  • M.F. Dimin
  • Sian-Meng Se
  • Azizah Shaaban
  • M.M. Hashim

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15282/ijame.10.2014.18.0169

Keywords:

Urea impregnated biochar, surface functional groups, mineralization, ammonium release, nitrate release.

Abstract

Rubber wood sawdust (RWSD) is converted into a porous form of biochar through the
slow pyrolysis process. In this study, it is used as a green binder to bind the urea
together and form a fertilizer. The objective of the current research is to investigate the effect of biochar impregnation with urea on the N-nutrients retention in soils. The
biochars were produced at heating temperatures of 300 °C and 700 °C for 3 hours with continuous nitrogen gas purging at 30 ml/min and a constant heating rate of 5 °C/min. The obtained biochars were characterized by XRD, Boehm titration, pH alkalinity, BET specific surface area and SEM. Boehm titration demonstrated a reduction of acidic functional groups with the increase of heating temperature, recorded as 1.3 and 0.3 mmol/g respectively for 300 °C and 700 °C. Conversely, biochar produced at higher temperature was reported to have a larger specific surface area of 5.4 m2/g. The impregnation was carried out on both biochars produced with molten urea. Results from mineralization showed that the sample with impregnation retained more nutrients in the soil compared to the un-impregnated sample, manifesting biochar as a potential material to be impregnated with urea for slow release and better nutrients retention in soil.

Downloads

Published

2022-12-09

How to Cite

[1]
M. . Dimin, S.-M. . Se, A. Shaaban, and M. . Hashim, “Urea Impregnated Biochar to Minimize Nutrients Loss in Paddy Soils ”, Int. J. Automot. Mech. Eng., vol. 10, pp. 2016–2024, Dec. 2022.

Issue

Section

Articles

Similar Articles

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.