Poultry Manure-Derived Biochar Synthesis, Characterization, and Valorization in Agriculture: Effect of Pyrolysis Temperature and Metal-Salt Modification
Author | Hadroug, Samar |
Author | El-Bassi, Leila |
Author | Jellali, Salah |
Author | Azzaz, Ahmed Amine |
Author | Jeguirim, Mejdi |
Author | Hamdi, Helmi |
Author | Leahy, James J. |
Author | Assadi, Amine Aymen |
Author | Kwapinski, Witold |
Available date | 2025-10-15T06:03:32Z |
Publication Date | 2025-09-01 |
Publication Name | Soil Systems |
Identifier | http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/soilsystems9030085 |
Citation | Hadroug, S.; El-Bassi, L.; Jellali, S.; Azzaz, A.A.; Jeguirim, M.; Hamdi, H.; Leahy, J.J.; Assadi, A.A.; Kwapinski, W. Poultry Manure-Derived Biochar Synthesis, Characterization, and Valorization in Agriculture: Effect of Pyrolysis Temperature and Metal-Salt Modification. Soil Syst. 2025, 9, 85. https://doi.org/10.3390/soilsystems9030085 |
Abstract | In the present work, six biochars were produced from the pyrolysis of poultry manure at 400 °C and 600 °C (PM-B-400 and PM-B-600), and their post-modification with, respectively, iron chloride (PM-B-400-Fe and PM-B-600-Fe) and potassium permanganate (PM-B-400-Mn and PM-B-600-Mn). First, these biochars were deeply characterized through the assessment of their particle size distribution, pH, electrical conductivity, pH at point-zero charge, mineral composition, morphological structure, and surface functionality and crystallinity, and then valorized as biofertilizer to grow spring barley at pot-scale for 40 days. Characterization results showed that Fe- and Mn-based nanoparticles were successfully loaded onto the surface of the post-modified biochars, which significantly enhanced their structural and surface chemical properties. Moreover, compared to the control treatment, both raw and post-modified biochars significantly improved the growth parameters of spring barley plants (shoot and root length, biomass weight, and nutrient content). The highest biomass production was obtained for the treatment with PM-B-400-Fe, owing to its enhanced physico-chemical properties and its higher ability in releasing nutrients and immobilizing heavy metals. These results highlight the potential use of Fe-modified poultry manure-derived biochar produced at low temperatures as a sustainable biofertilizer for soil enhancement and crop yield improvement, while addressing manure management issues. |
Sponsor | This work was funded by the Tunisian Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research; the ERASMUS+ International Credit Mobility Program with University of Limerick; and Sultan Qaboos University and Qatar University in joint projects number CL/SQU\QU/CESR/23/01 and IRCC-2023-004. |
Language | en |
Publisher | MDPI |
Subject | biofertilizer plant growth post-modification poultry manure pyrolysis |
Type | Article |
Issue Number | 3 |
Volume Number | 9 |
ESSN | 2571-8789 |
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