How hot the pile can get depends on how well the composter controls a number of
factors. These are so important that they need to be considered in detail.
Particle size. Microorganisms are not capable of chewing or mechanically attacking
food. Their primary method of eating is to secrete digestive enzymes that break down and
then dissolve organic matter. Some larger single-cell creatures can surround or envelop
and then "swallow" tiny food particles. Once inside the cell this material is
then attacked by similar digestive enzymes.
Since digestive enzymes attack only outside surfaces, the greater the surface area the
composting materials present the more rapidly microorganisms multiply to consume the food
supply. And the more heat is created. As particle size decreases, the amount of surface
area goes up just about as rapidly as the number series used a few paragraphs back to
illustrate the multiplication of microorganisms.
The surfaces presented in different types of soil similarly affect plant growth so
scientists have carefully calculated the amount of surface areas of soil materials.
Although compost heaps are made of much larger particles than soil, the relationship
between particle size and surface area is the same. Clearly, when a small difference in
particle size can change the amount of surface area by hundreds of times, reducing the
size of the stuff in the compost pile will:
- expose more material to digestive enzymes;
- greatly accelerate decomposition;
- build much higher temperatures.
Oxygen supply. All desirable organisms of decomposition are oxygen breathers or
"aerobes. There must be an adequate movement of air through the pile to supply their
needs. If air supply is choked off, aerobic microorganisms die off and are replaced by
anaerobic organisms. These do not run by burning carbohydrates, but derive energy from
other kinds of chemical reactions not requiring oxygen. Anaerobic chemistry is slow and
does not generate much heat, so a pile that suddenly cools off is giving a strong
indication that the core may lack air. The primary waste products of aerobes are water and
carbon dioxide gas--inoffensive substances. When most people think of putrefaction they
are actually picturing decomposition by anaerobic bacteria. With insufficient oxygen,
foul-smelling materials are created. Instead of humus being formed, black, tarlike
substances develop that are much less useful in soil. Under airless conditions much
nitrate is permanently lost. The odiferous wastes of anaerobes also includes hydrogen
sulfide (smells like rotten eggs), as well as other toxic substances with very unpleasant
qualities.
Heaps built with significant amounts of coarse, strong, irregular materials tend to
retain large pore spaces, encourage airflow and remain aerobic. Heat generated in the pile
causes hot air in the pile's center to rise and exit the pile by convection. This
automatically draws in a supply of fresh, cool air. But heaps made exclusively of large
particles not only present little surface area to microorganisms, they permit so much
airflow that they are rapidly cooled. This is one reason that a wet firewood rick or a
pile of damp wood chips does not heat up. At the opposite extreme, piles made of finely
ground or soft, wet materials tend to compact, ending convective air exchanges and
bringing aerobic decomposition to a halt. In the center of an airless heap, anaerobic
organisms immediately take over.