|

  • Collection Type
    • Article
    • Book
    • Conference or Workshop Item
    • Guide Book
    • Hafl Al-Takharruj Collection
    • Newsletter
    • Newspaper
    • Video
    • Thesis
    • Examination paper
    • UNISSA Library Books
    • Chapter in Book
  • Faculty
    • Faculty of Usuluddin
    • Faculty of Shariah and Law
    • Faculty of Arabic Language
    • Faculty of Islamic Economics and Finance
    • Faculty of Islamic Development Management
  • Centre
    • Halalan Thayyiban Research
    • Mazhab Syafie Research Centre
  • External Links
    • Universiti Islam Sultan Sharif Ali
    • Open Journal System (OJS)
    • UNISSA Press Book Shop
    • LIbrary OPAC
  • Login
UNISSA Repository Wrapper
 
View Item 
  •   e-I'lami UNISSA
  • PUBLICATIONS
  • ARTICLE
  • View Item
  •   e-I'lami UNISSA
  • PUBLICATIONS
  • ARTICLE
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Phosphorus Sorption following the Application of Charcoal and Sago (Metroxylon sagu) Bark Ash to Acid Soils

Date
2022
Author
Professor Dr Ahmed Osumanu Haruna
External Links

https://www.mdpi.com/ioap

Metadata
Show full item record
Abstract
Acidic cations such as Al, Fe, and Mn tend to fix P in soils, and this reaction make P unavailable for plant uptake. Several conventional strategies for farmers had been proposed to ameliorate Al toxicity either via liming or continuous P fertilization. However, these approaches are not only expensive but are also environmental unfriendly. Thus, a sorption study was carried out using charcoal and sago bark ash as soil amendments to determine their effects on P sorption characteristics of low pH soils. Phosphorus sorption determination was based on standard procedures and the P adsorption data for the samples tested in this study were fitted to the Langmuir equation. The results suggest that the combined use of charcoal and sago bark ash decreased P adsorption and increased P desorption relative to the untreated soils. Organic matter in the charcoal reduced P sorption by providing more negatively charged surfaces, thus increasing anion repulsion. Apart from increasing the amount of P adsorbed in the soil, the use of the sago bark ash increased the amount of P desorbed because the primary reaction between the sago bark ash and soils is an acid neutralization reaction. These improvements do not only reduce P fixation in acid soils but they also promote the effective utilization of nutrients via the timely release of nutrients for maximum crop production. In conclusion, the incorporation of charcoal and sago bark ash to the soil had a positive effect on replenishing the soil solution’s P. The organic matter of the charcoal reduces P sorption capacity by blocking P binding sites, increasing the negative electric potential in the plane of adsorption, causing steric hindrance on the mineral surfaces and decreasing goethite and hematite-specific surface areas. However, there is a need for the inclusion of more soil chemical, physical, and mineralogical properties in predicting soil P sorption to enhance the reliability of the findings.
URI
https://e-ilami.unissa.edu.bn:8443/handle/20.500.14275/4838
Collections
  • ARTICLE [149]

2024   |   All rights reserved

e‐I'lami is managed by UNISSA Library and maintained by Elite Computer Systems Sdn. Bhd.

Universiti Islam Sultan Sharif Ali

Spg 347, Jalan Pasar Gadong BE 1310 Negara Brunei Darussalam

Office Call Number: +673 2462000 ext 603/604

library.unissa@unissa.bn


 

My Account

RegisterLogin

Browse

All of e-I'lamiCommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjects

My Account

LoginRegister

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

2024   |   All rights reserved

e‐I'lami is managed by UNISSA Library and maintained by Elite Computer Systems Sdn. Bhd.

Universiti Islam Sultan Sharif Ali

Spg 347, Jalan Pasar Gadong BE 1310 Negara Brunei Darussalam

Office Call Number: +673 2462000 ext 603/604

library.unissa@unissa.bn