EGU22-1299
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-1299
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Minimising nitrogen losses from agricultural soil using a nitrogen-doped nanocomposite

Jessica Chadwick1,2, Peng Zhang1, Iseult Lynch1, Sami Ullah1, and Ryan Mushinski2
Jessica Chadwick et al.
  • 1University of Birmingham, Life and Environmental Sciences, Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, United Kingdom of Great Britain – England, Scotland, Wales (jxc1326@student.bham.ac.uk)
  • 2University of Warwick, Life Sciences, United Kingdom

Nitrogen emissions from agricultural soils have been increasing over the past century due to improved accessibility of nitrogen fertilisers. These fertilisers have unbalanced the global nitrogen (N) cycle, with far-reaching effects on soil acidification and biodiversity, eutrophication, and ozone depletion. The high yields achieved by modern agriculture must be maintained but this cannot come at the cost of the earth. Nanomaterials have been proposed as a viable alternative to improve conventional fertilisers and have been tested on a range of crops, with analysis of their effects on N cycling also common. Nanofertilisers have one or more dimensions on a nanoscale, and their high surface area to volume ratio causes them to adsorb to biomolecules around them, changing their reactivity and stability as they enter new environments. Previous work (Ramirez-Rodriguez et al. 2020) showed the nanocomposite, urea-doped amorphous calcium phosphate (U-ACP), was able to maintain wheat yield at a much lower concentration as compared to urea alone. Our study compared U-ACP to urea treatment on lettuce growth, N-cycle community size, N leachate concentration and reactive N-oxide (NOY) emissions. Urea and U-ACP treatment both produced more lettuce biomass than the control. However, U-ACP treatment significantly reduced NOY emissions from soil as compared to urea-treated soils, reducing emissions down to the same concentration as control soils. This pattern was also seen in aqueous emissions of reactive N species (ammonium, nitrite, and nitrate), with urea treated soils consistently producing higher concentrations than U-ACP treated soils. Denitrifying bacteria were more prevalent in U-ACP treated soils, potentially reflecting that the nanocomposite is able to aid in more complete denitrification, reducing production of intermediary, polluting N species. Our work focussed on NOY over other forms of volatile N, the high levels of NOY production by urea-treated soils indicate this may be an area of research that is deserving of greater attention in the future. This work illustrates that U-ACP, and other composite nanocarriers like it, may be good fertiliser candidates going into the future to reduce agricultural pollution, while maintaining crop yields.

How to cite: Chadwick, J., Zhang, P., Lynch, I., Ullah, S., and Mushinski, R.: Minimising nitrogen losses from agricultural soil using a nitrogen-doped nanocomposite, EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-1299, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-1299, 2022.