4.7 Article

Field-scale fluorescence fingerprints of biochar-derived dissolved organic matter (DOM) provide an effective way to trace biochar migration and the downward co-migration of Pb, Cu and As in soil

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 301, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.134738

Keywords

Heavy metal(loid)s; Biochar; DOM; Co-migration

Funding

  1. NSFC-Guangdong Joint Key Fund Project, China [U1201234]
  2. National Science and technology major project ? [2016YFC0400703-3]
  3. Water pollution control and government?
  4. National key research and development plan, China

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This study used the EEM-PARAFAC technique to track the migration of biochar in soil, and found that the addition of biochar increased the content of DOM, HIX and BIX in soil, and may also increase the content of fulvic and humic acids in soil. It was also observed that biochar can affect the migration of heavy metals in soil.
Although the benefits of biochar amendment for heavy metal(loid) immobilization in soil have been widely recognized, its migration in soil and the resultant effects on the risk of downward migration of metal(loid)s are still poorly understood. In this study, based on biochar derived dissolved organic matter (DOM), excitationemission matrix coupled with parallel factor analysis (EEM-PARAFAC) technique was employed to trace biochar migration within one year in 0-100 cm soil profiles in the field. The vertical co-migration of Pb, Cu and As was also analyzed. With biochar amended, DOM, humification index (HIX) and biological index (BIX) in 0-60 cm soil profiles increased significantly, while pH only increased in the topsoil. The identified water-extracted DOM components showed that biochar could enhance the content of fulvic acids and humic acids in soil DOM and biochar might migrate downward to 60 cm soil profiles. Furthermore, toluene/methanol-extracted DOM also confirmed the migration extent of biochar, which was more suitable to trace biochar migration because of its high resistance to the long-term ageing in the field. Moreover, we found that biochar reduced the content of Cu in 0-60 cm soil profiles, but increased the available Pb and As in the 20-40 cm soil layers. The Pearson's correlation study confirmed a strong correlation (0.568**< 0.803**) between the content of heavy metal(loid)s and humic-like components of soil DOM, which suggested that biochar co-migrated with Pb, Cu and As, and the

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