The nitrogen cycle and mitigation strategies for nitrogen loss during organic waste composting: A review

Composting is a promising technology to decompose organic waste into humus-like high-quality compost, which can be used as organic fertilizer. However, greenhouse gases (N2O, CO2, CH4) and odorous emissions (H2S, NH3) are major concerns as secondary pollutants, which may pose adverse environmental a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemosphere (Oxford) 2022-08, Vol.300, p.134514-134514, Article 134514
Hauptverfasser: Hoang, Hong Giang, Thuy, Bui Thi Phuong, Lin, Chitsan, Vo, Dai-Viet N., Tran, Huu Tuan, Bahari, Mahadi B., Le, Van Giang, Vu, Chi Thanh
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Composting is a promising technology to decompose organic waste into humus-like high-quality compost, which can be used as organic fertilizer. However, greenhouse gases (N2O, CO2, CH4) and odorous emissions (H2S, NH3) are major concerns as secondary pollutants, which may pose adverse environmental and health effects. During the composting process, nitrogen cycle plays an important role to the compost quality. This review aimed to (1) summarizes the nitrogen cycle of the composting, (2) examine the operational parameters, microbial activities, functions of enzymes and genes affecting the nitrogen cycle, and (3) discuss mitigation strategies for nitrogen loss. Operational parameters such as moisture, oxygen content, temperature, C/N ratio and pH play an essential role in the nitrogen cycle, and adjusting them is the most straightforward method to reduce nitrogen loss. Also, nitrification and denitrification are the most crucial processes of the nitrogen cycle, which strongly affect microbial community dynamics. The ammonia-oxidizing bacteria or archaea (AOB/AOA) and the nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (NOB), and heterotrophic and autotrophic denitrifiers play a vital role in nitrification and denitrification with the involvement of ammonia monooxygenase (amoA) gene, nitrate reductase genes (narG), and nitrous oxide reductase (nosZ). Furthermore, adding additives such as struvite salts (MgNH4PO4·6H2O), biochar, and zeolites (clinoptilolite), and microbial inoculation, namely Bacillus cereus (ammonium strain), Pseudomonas donghuensis (nitrite strain), and Bacillus licheniformis (nitrogen fixer) can help control nitrogen loss. This review summarized critical issues of the nitrogen cycle and nitrogen loss in order to help future composting research with regard to compost quality and air pollution/odor control. [Display omitted] •The nitrogen cycle is the crucial biochemical process of organic waste composting.•Nitrification and denitrification are the main steps of the nitrogen cycle.•Proteobacteria and Thaumarchaeota are dominant microorganisms in thermophilic phase.•Nitrogen loss mainly occurs via volatilization and leaching during the composting.•Adding biochar, zeolite, and microbial incubation can mitigate nitrogen loss.
ISSN:0045-6535
1879-1298
DOI:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.134514