EGU2020-22358
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-22358
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

VOC analysis in soils – Extending SPME to SPME-trap and SPME-trap with enrichment.

Robert Brown1, Jan Peter Mayser2, Caroline Widdowson2, Dave Chadwick1,3, and Davey Jones1,4
Robert Brown et al.
  • 1School of Natural Sciences, Bangor University, Gwynedd, UK
  • 2Markes International, Gwaun Elai Medi-Science Campus, Llantrisant, RCT, CF72 8XL, UK
  • 3Interdisciplinary Research Centre for Agriculture Green Development in Yangtze River Basin, Southwest University, Chongqing, China
  • 4UWA School of Agriculture and Environment, University of Western Australia, Perth, WA 6009, Australia

The ability of an agricultural soil to function and sustainably provide an increasing food supply for a rapidly increasing global population has become of vital worldwide importance. Traditionally, soil health has been determined on a physico-chemical basis with biological characteristics often being ignored. Although several biological methods have been proposed, to date, none of these methods adequately indicate soil health. One method proposed to correct these circumstances is profiling or fingerprinting the volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from soil. VOCs in soils originate from a large variety of biological sources; microbial, fungal, animal- and plant-derived. These volatilomes are vital to plant/fungi-microbe and animal/human-microbe interactions and therefore offer a potential reactive, functional diagnostic tool to determine soil health by investigating the intra and interspecies interactions.

The standard methodology for VOC profiling has been solid phase microextraction (SPME). This automated VOC extraction method allows the monitoring of the community structure, physiological state, and activity of any microbial community in a soil without the need of manual extraction or cultivation procedures. Other common techniques that could be used to monitor the VOC fingerprints from soils include high capacity sorptive extraction (HCSE) or thermal desorption using sorbent-packed tubes for passive, in-situ sampling of soil gas.

Combining each of these techniques with an innovative cryogen-free focussing and pre-concentration trap has two main advantages:

  1. All extraction techniques can run on a single platform without the need to change the hardware.
  2. Single (SPME-trap) and multiple extractions (SPME-trap with enrichment) can be carried out automatically on a single sample to increase the analytical sensitivity, thus achieving a comprehensive VOC profile.

In this microcosm study, soils were treated in three different ways and their VOC profiles investigated. A ‘good’ soil comprised of brown earth and compost, a ‘medium’ soil of unaltered brown earth and a ‘bad’ soil of brown earth held under eutrophic anaerobic conditions. 2 g of each soil was analysed with SPME-trap, SPME-trap with enrichment, HCSE and sorbent tubes. Both a targeted (phenol, p-cresol, isophorone, indole and trans-β-ionone) and untargeted approach indicates that there are significant differences between the different soil types. By increasing the sensitivity of the untargeted approach with SPME-trap enrichment, this study was able to extend the number of VOCs identified, allowing a much more comprehensive VOC profile and possibility to determine the actual functions of specific VOC produced by the soil microbial community.

How to cite: Brown, R., Mayser, J. P., Widdowson, C., Chadwick, D., and Jones, D.: VOC analysis in soils – Extending SPME to SPME-trap and SPME-trap with enrichment., EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-22358, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-22358, 2020