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1.
We studied the acid‐base properties of 16 fulvic acids and 16 humic acids isolated from the surface (3–15 cm) and subsurface (> 45 cm) horizons of two types of acid forest soils, derived respectively from amphibolite and granite rocks, under five different types of vegetation. The observed differences between the contents of humic substances in the two types of soils were related to the degree of Al‐saturation of the soil organic matter, as indicated by the molar ratio between pyrophosphate extractable Al and C. Humic fractions were characterized in terms of elemental composition, and CPMAS 13C NMR spectrometry. The contents of carboxylic and phenolic groups were estimated by potentiometric titrations conducted in 0.1 m KNO3 in a nitrogen atmosphere. The fulvic acids contained more carboxylic groups but less phenolic groups than the humic acids: the ratio of phenolic to carboxylic groups in the humic acids was 0.48 ± 0.10 and in the fulvic acids 0.23 ± 0.05. The mean values of the protonation constants of each of the humic substance fractions can be used as generic parameters for describing the proton binding properties. The fulvic acids isolated from the subsurface horizon of the soil contained between 2.6 and 23% more carboxylic groups, and the humic acids between 8 and 43% more carboxylic groups than those isolated from the surface horizon of the same soil.  相似文献   

2.
To investigate the chemical heterogeneity of humic substances in relation to molecular size, fulvic and humic acids were extracted and purified from the surface horizon of a Humic Gleysol in northern Switzerland. A fractionation scheme using hollow‐fibre ultrafiltration cartridges was developed and used to obtain four size fractions of the humic acid with nominal molecular weight ranges > 300 kDa, 100–300 kDa, 30–100 kDa, and 10–30 kDa. The fulvic acid and all humic acid fractions were characterized by size exclusion chromatography, elemental analysis (C, H, N, S), as well as spectroscopic techniques including UV‐VIS, CP‐MAS 13C‐NMR, FT‐IR, and fluorescence spectroscopy. Clear chemical differences between the humic acid size fractions were observed. Smaller size fractions of the soil humic acid contained more chargeable functional groups and a larger percentage of aromatic carbon than the larger size fractions. Conversely, the percentage of aliphatic carbon increased with increasing apparent molecular weight. The chemical composition of the smallest humic acid fraction differed clearly from the fulvic acid fraction, despite similar apparent molecular size and carboxyl carbon content. Small humic acids contained much more aromatic carbon and less aliphatic carbon than the fulvic acid fraction. Apparently, humic size fractions differ in their chemical composition, which can have important implications for their environmental behaviour.  相似文献   

3.
For accurate interpretation of cation binding to natural organic matter, the proton binding behaviour of both solid and dissolved natural organic matter must first be established. In the present study, potentiometric titrations of samples of humin and humic acid extracted from a peat soil were performed at different ionic strengths. Humic acid (HA) samples in solution (dissolved humic acid, DHA) and in suspension (aggregated humic acid, AHA) were titrated. The corresponding charge curves were analysed with the NICA‐Donnan model and the results were compared with those previously obtained for the peat soil. Good reproduction of the DHA charge curves was obtained, and in the case of the AHA, the exact forms of the charge curves were not reproduced at pH < 6 because of the conformational changes and dissolution of the sample that took place throughout the titration. The peat and humin displayed similar proton binding behaviour, which was different to that of the humic acid. With the Donnan approach, the value of parameter b, that relates the Donnan volume to the ionic strength, was the same for peat and humin and less than that of the humic acid, for both the dissolved samples and those in suspension, indicating that the effect of ionic strength on the charge is greater in the peat and humin than in the HA. The ratio between the contents of phenolic groups and of carboxylic groups was greater in peat and humin than in humic acid. The model used revealed that the acid‐base behaviour of the peat is closer to that of the humin than to that of the humic acid.  相似文献   

4.
Samples of three organic‐rich soils (ombrotrophic peat, podzol H‐horizon, humic ranker) were extensively washed with dilute nitric acid, dialysed against deionised water, and then subjected to acid‐base titrations over the pH range 3–10, in 0.3–300 mm NaNO3, and with soil concentrations in the range 2–150 g l?1. The results for the three soils were quantitatively similar. Comparison of the titration data with previously published results for humic acids isolated from the same soils showed the soil organic matter to have a greater ionic strength dependency of proton binding and to possess relatively greater buffering capacity at high pH, attributable to weak acid groups (c. 2–5 mmol g–1) in the humin fraction of the soils. To describe the soil titration data quantitatively, we modified Humic Ion‐Binding Model VI‐FD, which utilizes a fixed Donnan volume to describe counterion accumulation, by increasing the content of weak acid groups. When artefacts in pH measurement caused by the suspension effect were taken into account, the resulting Model VI‐FD2 provided good or fair simulations of all the titration data. The results suggest that soil structure, specifically aggregation, plays a significant role in cation binding by organic soils in situ. The lack of dependence of the titration results on soil suspension concentration suggests that the findings can be applied to soils in situ.  相似文献   

5.
《Geoderma》2006,130(1-2):124-140
Chemically and physically fractionated samples extracted from the surface horizon of a soil developed under a mix of coniferous and deciduous vegetation in southwestern Colorado were studied. 13C NMR data on this soil's organic matter and its HF(aq)-washed residue, as well as the classic acid/base-separated humic fractions (humic acid, fulvic acid, humin), were examined for chemical–structural detail, e.g., the various structural functionalities present (especially lipids, carbohydrates, aromatics, polypeptides and carbonyl/carboxyls). Among the humic fractions, it was found that the lipid concentrations are in the order humic acid>fulvic acid= humin; for carbohydrates the order is fulvic acid>humin>humic acid; for aromatic carbons the order is humic acid>humin>fulvic acid; for polypeptides it is humic acid>fulvic acid>humin and for carbonyl/carboxyl species it is humin>humic acid>fulvic acid, but the differences are small. 13C spin–lattice relaxation times indicate that at least two types of “domains” exist in each, corresponding to “higher” and “lower” concentrations of paramagnetic centers, e.g., Fe3+.  相似文献   

6.
A sample of ombrotrophic peat from Moor House in northern England was extensively extracted with dilute nitric acid (pH 1) to free it of bound cations. Suspensions of the acid‐washed peat (5–30 g l?1), prepared with different concentrations of background electrolyte (NaCl and KCl), were used to conduct batch acid–base titrations. A strong dependence of proton release on ionic strength (I) was observed, the apparent acid dissociation constant (pKapp) being found to decrease by approximately 1.0 for each tenfold increase in I. This behaviour could not be explained satisfactorily with Humic Ion‐Binding Model VI, a discrete‐site/electrostatic model of cation binding by humic substances, parameterized with data from laboratory studies on isolated samples. More success was obtained by abandoning the impermeable‐sphere electrostatic submodel used in Model VI, and instead assuming the peat to consist of aggregates with fixed internal volume, and with counterion accumulation described by the Donnan model, as proposed by Marinsky and colleagues. The fixed‐volume Donnan model (Model VI‐FD) could also approximately explain other reported results from acid–base titrations of peat, including the effects on the titrations of complexing cations (Al, Ca, Cu). Copper titrations of the Moor House sample were performed using an ion‐selective electrode, with peat suspensions in the acid pH range, at two ionic strengths, and in the presence of Al and Ca. The measured concentrations of Cu2+ were in the range 10?13?10?5 m . Model VI‐FD provided reasonable fits of the experimental data, after optimization of the intrinsic binding constant for Cu, the optimized value being close to the default value derived previously from data referring to isolated humic substances. The optimized constants for Al and Ca, derived from their competition effects, were also close to their default values. Additional experiments were performed in which the centrifugation‐depletion method was used to measure the binding of a cocktail of metals (Al, Ni, Cu, Zn, Cd, Eu, Pb) at a single pH. The model correctly predicted strong binding of Al, Cu, Eu and Pb, and weaker binding of Ni, Zn and Cd. For the strongly binding metals, the dissolved forms were calculated to be mainly due to complexes with dissolved humic matter, whereas the free ions (Ni2+, Zn2+, Cd2+) dominated for the weakly binding metals. Acid‐washed soil appears to provide a valuable intermediate between isolated humic substances and untreated soil for the investigation of cation binding by natural organic matter in the natural environment.  相似文献   

7.
Fulvic acid extracted from peat was partially fractionated on anion and cation exchange resins. In the latter case the fractionation is attributed to the presence in fulvic acid of components possessing amine groups; this was confirmed by chemical means and by infrared spectroscopic evidence. The infrared and ultraviolet spectra of fulvic acid and its various fractions are discussed and the occurrence of carboxyl, phenolic, and amine groups in fulvic acid and the fractions obtained is considered. It was further established that nitrous acid can destroy the amine groups present in fulvic acid.  相似文献   

8.
Decomposition and humification were studied within three types of forest humus (mull, moder, and mor) by means of CPMAS 13C NMR spectroscopy combined with degradative methods. The NMR data show that O-alkyl carbon decreases in all soils, and alkyl as well as carboxyl carbon increase as depth and decomposition increase; the percentage of aromatic carbon remains constant at about 25%. With increasing depth the amount of carbon that can be identified as belonging to specific compound classes by wet chemical methods decreases from 60% to 40%. Microbial polysaccharides and the proportion of non polysaccharide O-alkyl carbon increase with depth. A selective preservation of recalcitrant, condensed lignin structural units is also observed. In order to relate the spectroscopic and chemical data from investigations of whole soils with studies of humification, samples were fractionated into fulvic acid, humic acid, and humin fractions. The fulvic acid fraction contains large concentrations of carbohydrates irrespective of the soil horizon. The humic acid fraction contains less polysaccharides, but high amounts of alkyl carbon and aromatic structures. The percentage of aromatic carbon existing in the humic acid fraction increases with depth, probably reflecting the amount and degree of oxidative decomposition of lignin. A loss of methoxyl and phenolic groups is evident in the 13C NMR spectra of the humic acid fraction. The humin fraction resembles relatively unchanged plant-derived materials as evident from the lignin parameters and carbohydrate contents. All the observed data seem to indicate that humic acids originate form oxidative degradation of humin or plant litter.  相似文献   

9.
Soil organic matter in Mollisols is often preserved for an extremely long period (e.g. > 3000 years). We confirmed that the stable organic matter in Mollisols is the medium to coarse sized (0.2–2.0 μm) clay-humus complex with humic acid combined with calcium as the main organic constituent. The argillic horizon contained relatively large amounts of clay-humus complexes and had relatively high carbon contents, humic acid/fulvic acid ratios and degrees of humification of humic acid. Medium clay and coarse clay fractions preserved the organic carbon most efficiently. Highly humified humic acid could be detected even in the uppermost part of the Ah horizon and was probably stabilized in lower horizons by forming a complex with clay fractions.  相似文献   

10.
The carbon-isotopic composition of fulvic and humic acid from the A horizons of eight soil types, developed under a wide variety of climatological conditions, was measured. The fulvic acid is always enriched in 13C as compared with the humic acid from the same soil by a rather constant factor of 0.9?. The fulvic acids are isotopically closer to the plant source of the organic matter and thus represent an intermediate stage in the formation of humic substances. Depth sections of peat soil showed that carbon isotopes can be used to evaluate the dynamic nature of the fulvic-acid fraction. With depth, a transfer of carbon groups from polysaccharides to fulvic acid is seen. Based on isotopic evidence it is shown that in addition to formation of β-humus, part of the fulvic acid is condensed with depth to a stable humic fraction — humin.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Humic substances are characterized by a strong binding capacity for both metals and organic pollutants, affecting their mobility and bioavailability. The understanding of the mechanisms of proton and metal binding to humic substances is of fundamental importance in geochemical modelling and prediction of cation speciation in the environment. This work reports results on copper binding on humic acids obtained through a thorough experimental and modelling approach. Two humic acids, a reference purified peat humic acid isolated by the International Humic Substances Society (IHSS) and a humic acid from a Greek soil, were experimentally studied at various pH values (4, 6 and 8), humic acid concentrations (ranging from 20 to 200 mg?L?1) and ionic strength (0.1 and 0.01 M NaNO3). The binding of copper to humic acids was determined over wide ranges of copper ion concentrations using a copper ion selective electrode. The copper binding isotherms obtained at different conditions have shown that copper binding is dependent on the pH and ionic strength of the solution and on the concentration of both humic acids. Copper binding experimental data were fitted to non-ideal competitive adsorption NICA-Donnan model and the model parameter values were calculated. Both Cu2+ and CuOH+ species binding to humic acid with different binding affinities were considered. Two sets of the NICA-Donnan parameters have been calculated: one for humic acid concentrations of ??100 mg?L?1and one for humic acid concentration of 20 mg?L?1. The meaning of the parameters values for each concentration level is also discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract

Humic and fulvic acid fractions were isolated from a mineral soil and a peat by adjusting the pH of the alkali extracts to a range of values from 0.2 to 2.5. Total inorganic and organic forms of phosphorus (P) in the acids were measured by chemical analysis and by 31P NMR spectroscopy. As the pH of precipitation of the mineral soil humic acid increased, there was an increase in the total P of the humic acid which related to the inorganic P component. In contrast with the peat, the increases observed in the pH range 0.2 to 1.5 were the result of changes in organic P. Using 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, the ratio of inorganic to organic P as mono‐ and di‐esters in the peat humic acid was found to increase from 1:4.8 at pH 2 to 1:19 at pH 2.5. In contrast with mineral soil humic acid, the ratio decreased from 1:6.1 at pH 0.2 to 1:1.3 at pH 2.5. The mono‐ester to di‐ester ratio was about 3 in the peat and 10 in the mineral soil and varied little with pH of precipitation. Phosphonates were detected only in the peat humic acid precipitated in the pH range 1.0 to 2.0  相似文献   

14.
Most of the Cu previously added to humic acid derived from a sedge fen peat was easily removed by washing with acid, but the strength of binding increased as the Cu content decreased. The capacity to retain firmly bound Cu was reduced to about half by treating the humic acid to block either carboxyl or hydroxyl groups alone or to block both groups together. The retaining sites blocked therefore probably involve both carboxyl and hydroxyl groups acting together, but alternatively could be groups such as hydroxy-quinone, affected by both types of treatment. Retention of Cu by peat differs from retention by the extracted humic acid.  相似文献   

15.
《Geoderma》1987,39(3):235-247
Two humic acids of different origin (peat and soil) were degraded with a 5% sodium perborate solution (140°C). This degradation process consists mainly of a stoichiometric production of hydrogen peroxide while the perborate is reacting with carboxyl groups of the oxidized polymers. A single perborate treatment degraded more than 40% of the humic acids to soluble products, but a 5-step oxidation was necessary for total degradation, the sample being transformed into soluble oligomers with properties similar to those of fulvic acids. The oligomeric fractions with lowest molecular weights, including individual molecules (soluble in ethyl acetate), were purified by adsorption chromatography and studied by GC-MS after methylation. The higher molecular weight fractions of oligomers were recovered over polyvinylpyrrolidone, eluted by alkali, and purified by ion-exchange chromatography (47% peat HA; 25% soil HA).Degradation products included alkanes, fatty acids and dicarboxylic acids. Aromatic compounds (mainly phenolic, benzenecarboxylic and cinnamic acids), amounted to 24–50% of the total volatile degradation products. There were striking differences between peat and soil humic acids, the former yielding typical lignin degradation products. Independently checked, the perborate degradation products were not the same as those obtained by mild treatment with hydrogen peroxide under alkaline conditions.  相似文献   

16.

Purpose

Due to the modernization of the agro-industrial sector, compounds with different toxicity and effects on human health and animal have been used and consequently affecting the environment. Among them, tetracycline (TC) stands out as one of the antibiotics most commonly used worldwide. This study evaluated the TC interaction with different fractions of peat in natura and humic substances, humic acid, fulvic acid, and humin.

Materials and methods

The different fractions of the organic matter were characterized by organic matter content, elemental analysis, spectroscopic analysis (E4/E6), and nuclear magnetic resonance of carbon 13 (NMR 13C), and the interaction between TC and different fractions of organic matter was made by fluorescence spectrometry. We used the tangential ultra-filtration system for determining the complexation capability of humic substances (HSs), fulvic acids (FA), humic acids (HA), and humin (HUM) from peat with TC. Finally, we evaluated sorption kinetic experiments between TC and peat in natura.

Results and discussion

The peat samples, humic substances, FAs, HAs, and HUM were characterized by organic matter (OM), atomic ratio (H/C and C/O) calculated from elemental analysis data, functional groups quantified by NMR 13C data, and E4/E6 ratio, and the results show significant differences in the structural characteristics of the fractions of OM influenced by the type of microorganisms and environmental factors associated with this decomposition. Data analysis revealed the strongest interaction between HUM and TC (59.19 mg g?1), followed by interaction between HS and TC (43.36 mg g?1 HS). In the sorption studies, these conditions showed the best model to describe the system under consideration using the Freundlich model.

Conclusions

The results showed that the different fractions of the OM extracted from peat show different contributions that affect the bioavailability of contaminants to the environment.
  相似文献   

17.
Soil organic matter was extracted by a mixture of O.IM Na4P2O: O.IM NaOH from a chronosequence of weakly weathered soils developed on aeolian sand, and fractionated into humin (non-extractable), humic acid, and fulvic acid. The mass of total organic carbon in the profiles, the 14C content and the 13C/12C ratios were also determined. The weight of total carbon increased rapidly at first and then gradually without attaining a steady state. This trend was also shown by the humin and fulvic acid fractions, but the humic acid fraction appeared to have reached a maximum after about 3000 years. The order of total weights of the organic fractions was humin > fulvic acid > humic acid. The evidence suggests that the proportions of the humic fractions formed by decomposition are related to soil differences but not to vegetation. The greater part of the plant material found in the soils appears in the humin and fulvic acid fractions.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract

Differences in characteristics of humic matter were investigated by solid‐state CP/MAS 13C NMR spectroscopy of whole (nontreated) materials and their extracted humic fractions. Samples used in the analysis were lignite, a commercial humate AG, and the Bh horizons of a Mascotte and a Lawnwood soil. Humic fractions were extracted by the 0.1 M NaOH or Na4P2O7 (pH 9.8) method. The humic (HA) and fulvic acid (FA) obtained were weighed and analysed for total acidity, carboxyl and phenolic‐OH group contents. Whole lignite, humate AG and soil samples, and the HA and FA fractions were analyzed by solid state CP MAS 13C NMR and infrared spectroscopy. Carbon, H, and N contents were determined by chemical analysis. NMR spectra of the combined HA+FA extracts resembled the spectra of the whole materials. No additional signals were detected, indicating that alien compounds were not produced during the extraction. The best spectra were obtained with HA samples produced by the NaOH method. These spectra closely resembled those of the untreated materials. Spectral and chemical differences noticed between the HA (or FA) fractions were attributed more to differences in origin than to the extraction procedure. Aliphatic, aromatic and carboxyl groups were the major components of HA from lignite and humate AG. In contrast, HA from the two Haplaquods were characterized by four major components: the aliphatic, polysaccharide, aromatic, and carboxyl groups. Regardless of origin, all the HA fractions contained similar functional groups, as indicated by their close similarities in infrared spectra.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of pH on the adsorption of copper (Cu), lead (Pb) and cadmium (Cd) by a peat soil was studied, and the results compared with those corresponding to cation binding by a dissolved peat humic acid (HA), and interpreted with a NICA–Donnan model. A potentiometric titration technique was used to determine the adsorption isotherms for H+, at different ionic strengths, and for Cu2+, Pb2+ and Cd2+ at different pH values, in a peat soil. The effect of the ionic strength on proton binding was similar for the soil (solid) organic matter and for dissolved HA. The adsorption isotherms for cation–peat and the binding curves cation–dissolved HA are almost parallel, although more cation was adsorbed per kg of C in the dissolved HA. The effect of pH on cation binding is similar for dissolved organic matter and for the organic soil. At low metal concentration the amount of adsorbed metal followed the order Cu2+ > Pb2+ > Cd2+. The cation-binding parameters obtained with the NICA–Donnan model allow excellent simulation of the effect of pH on the adsorption of Cu, Pb and Cd ions in the studied peat soil. The binding constants for the peat suspension were greater than the corresponding generic parameters for dissolved HA. Speciation calculations showed that for Cu and Pb, the most abundant fraction was the metal adsorbed on peat, whereas for Cd the most abundant fraction was dissolved metal.  相似文献   

20.
X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) spectra at the sulfur (S) K-edge (E=2472 eV) were compared for bulk soil material, humic and fulvic acid fractions, and different particle size separates from Ah horizons of two arable Luvisols, from an O and a Bs horizon of a Podzol under Norway spruce forest, and from an H horizon of a Histosol (peat bog). In the bulk soil samples, the contribution of reduced organic S (organic mono- and disulfides) to total sulfur increased from 27% to 52%, and the contribution of ester sulfate and SO42−-S decreased from 39% to 14% of total S in the following order: arable Luvisols Ah—forested Podzol O—Histosol H. This sequence reflects the increasing organic carbon content and the decreasing O2 availability in that order. Neither sulfonate nor inorganic sulfide was detected in any of the bulk soil samples. For all samples except the Podzol Bs, the XANES spectra of the bulk soils differed considerably from the spectra of the humic and acid fractions of the respective soils, with the latter containing less reduced S (16-44% of total S) and more oxidized S (sulfone S: 19-35%; ester sulfate S: 14-38% of total S). Also the S speciation of most particle size fractions extracted from the Ah horizon of the Viehhausen Luvisol and the Bs horizon of the Podzol was different from that of the bulk soil. For both soils, the contribution of oxidized S species to total S increased and the contribution of sulfoxides and organic mono- and disulfides decreased with decreasing particle size. Thus, sulfur K-edge XANES spectra of alkaline soil extracts, including humic and fulvic acids or of particle size separates are not representative for the S speciation of the original soil sample they are derived from. The differences can be attributed to (i) artificial changes of the sulfur speciation during alkaline extraction (conversion of reduced S into oxidized S, loss of SO42− during purification of the extracts by dialysis) or particle size separation (carry-over of water-soluble S, such as SO42−), but also to (ii) preferential enrichment of oxidized S in hydrophilic water-soluble soil organic matter (ester sulfate) and in the clay fraction of soils (ester sulfate, adsorbed SO42−).  相似文献   

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