Journal article

Effects of pyrolysis and incineration on the phosphorus fertiliser potential of bio-waste- and plant-based materials


Authors listRobinson, James Stephen; Leinweber, Peter

Publication year2023

Pages358-367

JournalWaste Management

Volume number172

ISSN0956-053X

eISSN1879-2456

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.wasman.2023.10.012

PublisherElsevier


Abstract
Land application of biomass materials and their products of thermal treatment (biochars and ashes) can offset the unsustainable use of soluble P fertilisers. However, few evaluations of P fertiliser potential have systematically addressed diverse biomass types with contrasting P contents. This paper evaluates the relative P fertiliser potential of four P-rich biowastes (animal bone, poultry manure, pig slurry, and a municipal sewage sludge) and three low-P, plant-based materials (reeds [Phragmites australis L.], rice husks [Oryza sativa L.] and cocoa prunings [Theobroma cacao L.]) and their biochars and ashes. We utilised three complementary approaches: P extractability in single solvents (2% formic and citric acids, and 1 M neutral ammonium citrate); sequential chemical P fractionation, and P dissolution/desorption kinetics. In most cases, pyrolysis and incineration of the P-rich biowastes increased P extractability (% TP) in the single solvents, whilst decreasing water-soluble P. For pig slurry, for example, pyrolysis reduced water-soluble P 20fold, with corresponding increases observed not only in the solvent-extractable P but also in the pool of potentially plant available, NaHCO3-Pi fraction (e.g., 17 to 35% TP). These complementary datasets were also evident for the low-P feedstocks and thermal products; e.g., pyrolysis increased the NaHCO3-Pi fraction in reed feedstock from 6 to 15% TP. For all biomass feedstocks, biochars and ashes, pseudo-second order P-release kinetics provided the best fit with the experimental data. The data demonstrate scope for using pyrolysis to upgrade the P fertiliser value of a wide range of biomass materials whilst reducing their environmental impact.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleRobinson, J. and Leinweber, P. (2023) Effects of pyrolysis and incineration on the phosphorus fertiliser potential of bio-waste- and plant-based materials, Waste Management, 172, pp. 358-367. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wasman.2023.10.012

APA Citation styleRobinson, J., & Leinweber, P. (2023). Effects of pyrolysis and incineration on the phosphorus fertiliser potential of bio-waste- and plant-based materials. Waste Management. 172, 358-367. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wasman.2023.10.012



Keywords


BIOCHARSBiomass feedstocksPhosphorus fertiliser potentialSEWAGE-SLUDGE

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 12:00