Effects of pyrolysis temperature on the hydrologically relevant porosity of willow biochar
Jari Hyv\"aluoma, Markus Hannula, Kai Arstila, Hailong Wang, Sampo, Kulju, and Kimmo Rasa

TL;DR
This study investigates how pyrolysis temperature influences the micrometer-scale porosity of willow biochar, which is crucial for water storage in plants, using advanced imaging techniques to determine if temperature adjustments can optimize biochar's water retention capacity.
Contribution
The research provides the first detailed analysis of micrometer-scale porosity development in willow biochar across different pyrolysis temperatures using x-ray tomography.
Findings
Initial pore structure determines micrometer porosity.
Pyrolysis temperature in studied range does not optimize pore structure for water storage.
Chemical surface modifications may influence water retention more than pore size.
Abstract
Biochar pore space consists of porosity of multiple length scales. In direct water holding applications like water storage for plant water uptake, the main interest is in micrometre-range porosity since these pores are able to store water that is easily available for plants. Gas adsorption measurements which are commonly used to characterize the physical pore structure of biochars are not able to quantify this pore-size range. While pyrogenetic porosity (i.e. pores formed during pyrolysis process) tends to increase with elevated process temperature, it is uncertain whether this change affects the pore space capable to store plant available water. In this study, we characterized biochar porosity with x-ray tomography which provides quantitative information on the micrometer-range porosity. We imaged willow dried at 60 C and biochar samples pyrolysed in three different…
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