2002
DOI: 10.1016/s0146-6380(02)00137-7
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Effects of charring on mass, organic carbon, and stable carbon isotope composition of wood

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Cited by 254 publications
(190 citation statements)
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“…Following heating over 100°C, δ 13 C values are elevated by up to 3.5‰ in bulk soil organic carbon, 2.0‰ in carbonized vegetation, 1.5‰ in plant propagules and 1.9‰ in wood (Cachier et al, 1985;Turekian et al, 1998;Werts and Jahren, 2007;Poole et al, 2002;Krull et al, 2003). In other work however, decreases of up to 1.8‰ have been observed in wood charcoal following heating up to 800°C (Jones et al, 1993, Czimczik et al, 2002Turney et al, 2006). Therefore, although available evidence suggests isotopic changes during charcoal production, both the sign and magnitude of fractionation effects is highly variable.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 85%
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“…Following heating over 100°C, δ 13 C values are elevated by up to 3.5‰ in bulk soil organic carbon, 2.0‰ in carbonized vegetation, 1.5‰ in plant propagules and 1.9‰ in wood (Cachier et al, 1985;Turekian et al, 1998;Werts and Jahren, 2007;Poole et al, 2002;Krull et al, 2003). In other work however, decreases of up to 1.8‰ have been observed in wood charcoal following heating up to 800°C (Jones et al, 1993, Czimczik et al, 2002Turney et al, 2006). Therefore, although available evidence suggests isotopic changes during charcoal production, both the sign and magnitude of fractionation effects is highly variable.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Therefore, changes in the proportion of different components following biomass heating could result in δ 13 C variations (e.g. Czimczik et al, 2002). Such an effect could also result in species-dependant isotopic changes, as is already observed in the rate of chemical transformations during pyrolysis (exposure to elevated temperatures in the absence of oxygen) (Labbé et al, 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 95%
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“…Czimczik et al (2002) found that δ 13 C values of softwood and hardwood chars both became more positive during charring at 150°C, but they became more negative at higher combustion temperatures. Similar findings were reported for thermal degradation of C3 and C4 vegetation in many studies (Leavitt et al, 1982;Turekian et al, 1998;Krull et al, 2003;Das et al, 2010;Bird and Ascough, 2012).…”
Section: δ 13 C Shift During Thermal Oxidationmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Por ejemplo la respuesta de los valores de δ 13 C de la MOS afectada por el fuego está siendo objeto de debate (Saito et al, 2007;Huber et al, 2013). Algunos autores han observado un incremento relativo en los valores de δ 13 C en muestras de suelos quemados (Bowman et al, 2007;Alexis et al, 2010); sin embargo otras investigaciones muestran la falta de una tendencia clara (Czimczik et al, 2002). La Fig.…”
Section: Figura 3 Termogramas De Pérdida De Peso (Tgs) Y Calorimetríunclassified