Biophysico‐Chemical Processes Involving Natural Nonliving Organic Matter in Environmental Systems 2009
DOI: 10.1002/9780470494950.ch7
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Black Carbon and Thermally Altered (Pyrogenic) Organic Matter: Chemical Characteristics and the Role in the Environment

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Cited by 4 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 133 publications
(197 reference statements)
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“…Therefore, lignin-like molecules were still extracted from RS-biochar at high temperatures. RS-lignin with strong cross-linked aromatic rings was refractory to thermal decomposition under anoxic conditions, consistent with the pure lignin pyrolysis. , Knicker and Sharma et al also reported that the highest lignin-derived biochar yield was achieved at anoxic pyrolysis temperatures of 500–600 °C and ∼ 60% of lignin was volatilized at 750 °C. , This phenomenon is different from the pyrolysis of lignin and soil organic matter under aerobic conditions. Knicker reported that almost all unprotected soil organic matter was aerobically combusted at ∼460 °C, and 20% remained as char at 550 °C was observed during aerobic lignin pyrolysis …”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 52%
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“…Therefore, lignin-like molecules were still extracted from RS-biochar at high temperatures. RS-lignin with strong cross-linked aromatic rings was refractory to thermal decomposition under anoxic conditions, consistent with the pure lignin pyrolysis. , Knicker and Sharma et al also reported that the highest lignin-derived biochar yield was achieved at anoxic pyrolysis temperatures of 500–600 °C and ∼ 60% of lignin was volatilized at 750 °C. , This phenomenon is different from the pyrolysis of lignin and soil organic matter under aerobic conditions. Knicker reported that almost all unprotected soil organic matter was aerobically combusted at ∼460 °C, and 20% remained as char at 550 °C was observed during aerobic lignin pyrolysis …”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 52%
“…7 However, the DBC content in riverine DOC is likely overestimated as the specious conversion factor for converting benzenecarboxylic acids quantified after nitric acid oxidation to DBC, which is susceptible to the chromatographic method or standard material used. 11 The large-scale use of biochar soil amendment and frequent forest fires pose unintended ecological consequences through increased transport of DBC into aquatic systems, 12,13 requiring assessment of composition, behavior, and fate of DBC in natural waters.…”
Section: ■ Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The determined concentrations and fractions of C and N in soils as well as the identified chemical composition of SOM (e.g., 13 C-CPMAS NMR and the FT-ICR-MS) revealed that charcoal affects C and N distribution and composition in charcoal enriched soils. Charcoal is rich in aromatic structures and is assumed to persist in soils for decades (Knicker, 2011;Schmidt et al, 2011;Wang et al, 2016), which could explain elevated concentrations of BC and the predominance of aromatic structures in SOM and dissolvable organic matter derived from charcoal particles (Haumaier and Zech, 1995;Knicker, 2009). Charcoal particles further resist relatively microbial decomposition and are known to form aggregates (Brodowski et al, 2006;Knicker, 2009;Schmidt et al, 2011).…”
Section: Charcoal Induced Effects On Bulk Sommentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Charcoal is rich in aromatic structures and is assumed to persist in soils for decades (Knicker, 2011;Schmidt et al, 2011;Wang et al, 2016), which could explain elevated concentrations of BC and the predominance of aromatic structures in SOM and dissolvable organic matter derived from charcoal particles (Haumaier and Zech, 1995;Knicker, 2009). Charcoal particles further resist relatively microbial decomposition and are known to form aggregates (Brodowski et al, 2006;Knicker, 2009;Schmidt et al, 2011). This results in a relative enrichment of charcoal particles ranging between 9-12 mm, particularly in less alkaline soils (Brodowski et al, 2006;Knicker, 2011;Assis et al, 2016) due to soil pH-related stabilization mechanisms that are scarcely understood (von Lü tzow et al, 2006).…”
Section: Charcoal Induced Effects On Bulk Sommentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pyrolysis products were reported for lysine (pyridine) (Sorge 1995), hydroxyproline, proline (1H-pyrrole, 1-methyl-) (Nguyen et al 2003), hydroxyproline (1H-pyrrole, 2,5-dimethyl-) (Chiavari and Galletti 1992), alanine, tyrosine (pyridine) (Chiavari and Galletti 1992;Nguyen et al 2003), threonine (pyridine, 5-ethenyl-2-methyl-) (Sorge et al 1993), and phenylalanine (quinoline) (Patterson et al 1973) (pyrolysis product in parenthesis). However, such a formation of N-heterocyclic compounds as pyrolysis products does not necessarily exclude their genuine occurrence in soils (Leinweber and Schulten 1998), especially if we consider recently described abiotic pathways for the formation of heterocyclic N (Jokic et al 2004a;Huang and Hardie 2009) and the impact of vegetation fires on soils (Knicker 2009).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%