Article, 2024

Acidification prior to drying of digestate solids affects nutrient uptake and fertilizer value when applied to maize

Sustainable Materials and Technologies, ISSN 2214-9937, Volume 41, 10.1016/j.susmat.2024.e01020

Contributors

Liu J. 0000-0001-8439-0875 (Corresponding author) [1] [2] Muller-Stover D.S. 0000-0001-7921-4471 [2] Jensen L.S. 0000-0002-1446-2084 [2]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Sun Yat-sen University
  2. [NORA names: China; Asia, East];
  3. [2] University of Copenhagen
  4. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Acidification has proven effective in minimizing NH emissions during the drying of digestate bio-solids, but its impact on soil nutrient dynamics and plant growth is less understood. This study aimed to assess the nitrogen and phosphorus efficiency of acidified-dried digestate solids as starter fertilizer for maize through a pot experiment and a soil incubation study. Two types of digestates (MDS and SDS) and two acidifying agents (concentrated HSO and alum) were used. Drying significantly lowered the nitrogen fertilizer replacement value (N-FRV) from 42% in untreated to 12% in the dried material, reducing maize biomass and N uptake by 34% and 54%, respectively. The decline mitigated by acidification, which doubled N-FRV to 28%. Drying enhanced maize P uptake by 25%, indicating dried MDS as an effective P fertilizer (P-FRV of 82%). However, alum negated the drying benefits for P uptake, aligning it with raw MDS levels. The SDS treatments showed no significant effects on maize growth or nutrient uptake, though dried SDS indicated a high N mineralization potential, N-FRV and P-FRV remained around 33% and 26%, respectively. The study concludes that HSO-acidified dried MDS could serves as a suitable starter fertilizer with balanced N and high P availability, supporting early maize development. Alum may serve to preserve N value while reducing P solubility to prevent runoff. Dried SDS is less effective as a mineral fertilizer replacement, better suited for sustaining soil organic N and P levels.

Keywords

Aluminum sulfate, Ammonia, Biosolids, Concentrated HSO, Drying management, Water-extractable phosphorus

Data Provider: Elsevier