%0 Journal Article %T Investigating inhibiting factors affecting seed germination index in kitchen waste compost products: Soluble carbon, nitrogen, and salt insights. %A Du S %A Ding S %A Wen X %A Yu M %A Zou X %A Wu D %J Bioresour Technol %V 406 %N 0 %D 2024 Aug 15 %M 38885720 %F 11.889 %R 10.1016/j.biortech.2024.130995 %X The seed germination index (GI) serves as the principal determinant that impedes the integration of aerobic composting products into agricultural lands. The current research work predominantly focuses on exploring the correlation between physical and chemical indicators of the compost products and GI, neglecting the fundamental cause. This study systematically analyzed the composition of GI aqueous extracts from compost products derived from kitchen waste under various composting methodologies, with nitrogen, carbon, and inorganic salt as critical factors. The analytical work concluded that acetic acid, formic acid, and ammonium were the inhibitory factors influencing GI. Validation experiments introduced inhibitory factors, yielding a functional relationship formula depicting GI variations due to a single influential factor. This study conclusively identified acetic acid as the primary constraint, establishing that its inhibitory concentration corresponded to 70 % GI stands at 85 mg/L. This study will provide guidelines for the future research on enhancing aerobic composting techniques.