Pyrolysis temperature regulates biochar-soil interactions to enhance cation exchange capacity, plant growth, and photosynthetic performance.
Ghani MU, Gong Y, Lin T, Xu Y, Zeng T
Soil Health
Charcoal buried in your raised bed isn't just inert filler — the temperature it was made at determines whether it locks nutrients in place or lets them wash away with every rain.
Researchers tested different types of charcoal (called biochar) made at different temperatures and mixed with a nitrogen fertilizer to see which combo best helped soil hold onto nutrients and helped water spinach grow. The charcoal made at a middle temperature — 500°C — and soaked in fertilizer was the clear winner, giving plants better growth and more active photosynthesis. This tells us that how biochar is made matters just as much as using it at all.
Key Findings
Biochar pyrolyzed at 500°C and impregnated with urea (IB500) produced the highest cation exchange capacity and nutrient availability among all seven treatments tested
IB500 significantly improved water spinach photosynthetic performance compared to urea-alone and other biochar treatments
Pyrolysis temperature was identified as the primary regulator of biochar-soil-nutrient interactions, with both lower (300°C) and higher (700°C) temperatures yielding inferior results
chevron_right Technical Summary
Biochar made at 500°C and infused with urea dramatically improved soil nutrient retention and plant growth in water spinach, outperforming other biochar types. Pyrolysis temperature turns out to be the key dial controlling how well biochar works as a soil amendment.
Abstract Preview
Poor nutrient retention in agricultural soils limits crop productivity and fertilizer use efficiency. Enhancing the soil capacity to retain cations such as Ca The effects of urea alone (UA) and bio...
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