Biochar-mediated regulation of greenhouse gas emission and toxicity reduction in bioremediation of organophosphorus pesticide-contaminated soils

Organophosphorus pesticides (OPPs) are a set of toxic persistent organic pollutants (POPs) present in the environment. Recently, biochar-mediated bioremediation has exhibited many advantages over conventional methods for the remediation of pesticide-contaminated soil. In the present study, biochar a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chinese journal of chemical engineering 2018-12, Vol.26 (12), p.2592-2600
Hauptverfasser: Zhen, Meinan, Song, Benru, Liu, Xiaomei, Chandankere, Radhika, Tang, Jingchun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Organophosphorus pesticides (OPPs) are a set of toxic persistent organic pollutants (POPs) present in the environment. Recently, biochar-mediated bioremediation has exhibited many advantages over conventional methods for the remediation of pesticide-contaminated soil. In the present study, biochar and nitrogen fertilizer (NH4NO3) were employed to remediate OPP-contaminated soil and the greenhouse gas (GHG) emission during 90days of incubation was investigated. After thermal desorption treatment, the content of organophosphorus pesticides reduced from 175.61μg·kg−1 to 62.68μg·kg−1. The addition of NH4NO3 in the following bioremediation led to larger reduction (34.35%) of the pesticide concentration than that of biochar (31.90%) for the contaminated soils with thermal desorption treatment, while the simultaneous addition of biochar and NH4NO3 led to the largest reduction of pesticide concentration (11.07%) for the soil without thermal desorption treatment. The addition of biochar and NH4NO3 only slightly increased the emission rate of GHGs from the soil without thermal treatment, but remarkably increased the emission rate of GHGs from the soil after thermal treatment. In most cases, the addition of NH4NO3 is more effective than biochar to promote the degradation of pesticide, but also exhibited higher GHG emission. The microbial community analysis suggests that the enhanced degradation of pesticide is mainly owing to the increased activity of microorganism.
ISSN:1004-9541
2210-321X
DOI:10.1016/j.cjche.2018.01.028