Hydroxyapatite/urea hybrid materials: what is the basis for the enhanced nutrient efficiency?

IF 3.5 Q3 ENGINEERING, ENVIRONMENTAL
Mohamed Ammar, Sherif Ashraf and Jonas Baltrusaitis
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Abstract

The growing demand for food production worldwide has led to the increased use of fertilizers contributing to a range of environmental problems. To reduce these problems, the development of urea–hydroxyapatite (HAP) materials as nutrient-efficient fertilizer carriers has gained considerable attention as a more nutrient-efficient alternative to conventional nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) fertilizers. Conventional N fertilizers, such as urea, possess high solubility and rapidly release nitrogen leading to significant nutrient losses through leaching and volatilization. Conventional P fertilizers suffer from quite the opposite problem: they are quickly immobilized in soil and P release becomes very slow. HAP is a naturally occurring mineral and has been postulated, at the nanoscale, to release P at a controlled rate although risks associated with HAP nanoparticle occupational and environmental toxicity remain. HAP/urea hybrid materials present a unique opportunity for N–P–(Ca) fertilizer material design where innate properties of the parent materials, urea and HAP, are altered due to the purported chemical interactions, thus resulting in a novel and improved nutrient management paradigm. This review summarizes the developments in their synthesis, nutrient release and plant uptake while scrutinizing the reported underlying chemical interactions between both parent compounds, critical to the enhanced efficiency in soil.

Abstract Image

羟基磷灰石/尿素混合材料:提高养分效率的基础是什么?
世界范围内对粮食生产的需求不断增长,导致化肥的使用增加,造成了一系列环境问题。为了减少这些问题,尿素-羟基磷灰石(HAP)材料作为营养高效肥料载体的开发作为一种更有效的替代传统氮(N)和磷(P)肥料得到了广泛的关注。常规氮肥,如尿素,溶解度高,氮素释放快,通过淋溶和挥发导致大量养分损失。传统的磷肥面临着完全相反的问题:它们在土壤中很快被固定,而磷的释放变得非常缓慢。HAP是一种天然存在的矿物质,虽然HAP纳米颗粒的职业和环境毒性风险仍然存在,但在纳米尺度上,它被假定以可控的速率释放P。HAP/尿素杂化材料为N-P - (Ca)肥料材料设计提供了一个独特的机会,其中母本材料尿素和HAP的固有特性由于所谓的化学相互作用而改变,从而导致一种新的和改进的养分管理范式。本文综述了它们的合成、养分释放和植物吸收方面的研究进展,同时详细介绍了对提高土壤效率至关重要的两种母本化合物之间潜在的化学相互作用。
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