Fire-derived organic matter, often referred to as pyrogenic organic matter (PyOM), is present in the Earth’s soil, sediment, atmosphere, and water. We investigated interactions of PyOM with ammonia (NH3) gas, which makes up much of the Earth’s reactive nitrogen (N) pool. Here we show that PyOM’s NH3 retention capacity under ambient conditions can exceed 180 mg N g−1 PyOM–carbon, resulting in a material with a higher N content than any unprocessed plant material and most animal manures. As PyOM is weathered, NH3 retention increases sixfold, with more than half of the N retained through chemisorption rather than physisorption. Near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy reveal that a variety of covalent bonds form between NH3-N and PyOM, more than 10% of which contained heterocyclic structures. We estimate that through these mechanisms soil PyOM stocks could retain more than 600-fold annual NH3 emissions from agriculture, exerting an important control on global N cycling.
The amine-rich surfaces
of pyrolyzed human solid waste (py-HSW)
can be “primed” or “regenerated” with
carbon dioxide (CO2) to enhance their adsorption of ammonia
(NH3) for use as a soil amendment. To better understand
the mechanism by which CO2 exposure facilitates NH3 adsorption to py-HSW, we artificially enriched a model sorbent,
pyrolyzed, oxidized wood (py-ox wood) with amine functional groups
through exposure to NH3. We then exposed these N-enriched
materials to CO2 and then resorbed NH3. The
high heat of CO2 adsorption (Q
st) on py-HSW, 49 kJ mol–1, at low surface coverage,
0.4 mmol CO2 g–1, showed that the naturally
occurring N compounds in py-HSW have a high affinity for CO2. The Q
st of CO2 on py-ox
wood also increased after exposure to NH3, reaching 50
kJ mol–1 at 0.7 mmol CO2 g–1, demonstrating that the incorporation of N-rich functional groups
by NH3 adsorption is favorable for CO2 uptake.
Adsorption kinetics of py-ox wood revealed continued, albeit diminishing
NH3 uptake after each CO2 treatment, averaging
5.9 mmol NH3 g–1 for the first NH3 exposure event and 3.5 and 2.9 mmol NH3 g–1 for the second and third; the electrophilic character
of CO2 serves as a Lewis acid, enhancing surface affinity
for NH3 uptake. Furthermore, penetration of 15NH3 and 13CO2 measured by NanoSIMS
reached over 7 μm deep into both materials, explaining the large
NH3 capture. We expected similar NH3 uptake
in py-HSW sorbed with CO2 and py-ox wood because both materials,
py-HSW and py-ox wood sorbed with NH3, had similar N contents
and similarly high CO2 uptake. Yet NH3 sorption
in py-HSW was unexpectedly low, apparently from potassium (K) bicarbonate
precipitation, reducing interactions between NH3 and sorbed
CO2; 2-fold greater surface K in py-HSW was detected after
exposure to CO2 and NH3 than before gas exposure.
We show that amine-rich pyrolyzed waste materials have high CO2 affinity, which facilitates NH3 uptake. However,
high ash contents as found in py-HSW hinder this mechanism.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.