Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/18037
Title: Microscopy and spectroscopy analysis of carbon nanostructures in highly fertile Amazonian anthrosoils
Authors: Jório, Ado
Ribeiro-Soares, Jenaina
Cançado, Luiz Gustavo
Falcão, Newton P.S.
dos Santos, Hélio Ferreira
Baptista, Daniel Lorscheitter
Martins Ferreira, E. H.
Archanjo, Bráulio Soares
Achete, Carlos Alberto
Keywords: Carbon Based Materials
Carbon Material
Carbon Nanostructures
Complex Morphology
Ecosystem Sustainability
Electron Energy Loss
Energy Dispersive X-ray
High Fertilities
Humid Tropics
Ion Exchange Capacity
Land-use Systems
Potential Model
Scanning And Transmission Electron Microscopy
Soil Fertility
Structural Aspects
Carbon
Charcoal
Electron Energy Loss Spectroscopy
Microscopy, Electron
Energy Dissipation
Morphology
Particles (particulate Matter)
Raman Scattering
Raman Spectroscopy
Soils
Transmission Electron Microscopy
Geologic Models
Ion Exchange
Microscopy
Nanotechnology
Numerical Model
Raman Spectroscopy
Soil Carbon
Soil Fertility
Sustainability
Amazonia
Issue Date: 2012
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Soil and Tillage Research
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 122, Pags. 61-66
Abstract: The anthropogenic Amazonian soil " Terra Preta de índio" (Amazonian Dark Earth) provides a potential model for a sustainable land-use system in the humid tropics. A large amount of carbon-based materials in this soil is responsible for its high fertility over long periods of usage, and soil scientists are trying to create " Terra Preta Nova" (New Dark Earth) by adding charcoal as a soil conditioner. By applying materials science tools, including scanning and transmission electron microscopy, energy dispersive X-ray, electron energy loss spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy, we show that these millenary carbon materials exhibit a complex morphology, with particles ranging in size from micro- to nanometers, from the core to the surface of the carbon grains. From one side, our results might elucidate how nature solved the problem of keeping high levels of ion exchange capacity in these soils. From the other side, morphology and dimensionality are the key issues in nanotechnology, and the structural aspects revealed here may help generating the Terra Preta Nova, effectively improving world agriculture and ecosystem sustainability. © 2012 Elsevier B.V.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1016/j.still.2012.02.009
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