EGU21-4125, updated on 04 Mar 2021
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4125
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Structural characterization of soil organic matter individual fractions (fulvic acids, humic acids and humins) in relation to potential sorption of organic contaminants 

Aleksandra Ukalska-Jaruga1, Romualda Bejger2, Guillaume Debaene1, and Bozena Smreczak1
Aleksandra Ukalska-Jaruga et al.
  • 1Institute of Soil Science and Plant Cultivation, Department of Soil Science Erosion and Land Conservation, Pulawy, Poland (aukalska@iung.pulawy.pl, gdebaene@iung.pulawy.pl, bozenas@iung.pulawy.pl)
  • 2West Pomeranian University of Technology in Szczecin, Szczecin, Poland (Romualda.Bejger@zut.edu.pl)

The objective of this paper was to investigate the molecular characterization of individual humic substances ( fulvic acids-FAs, humic ascids-HAs, and humins-HNs), which are the most reactive soil components and exhibit high sorption capacity in relation to various groups of organic contaminants. A wide spectrum of spectroscopic (UV-VIS, VIS-nearIR), as well as electrochemical (zeta potential, particle size diameter, polidyspersity index), methods were applied to find the relevant differences in the behavior, formation, composition and sorption properties of HS fractions derived from various mineral soils.

Soil material (n = 30) used for the study were sampled from the surface layer (0–30 cm) of agricultural soils. FAs and HAs were isolated by sequential extraction in alkaline and acidic solutions, according to the International Humic Substances Society method, while HNs was determined in the soil residue (after FAs and HAs extraction) by mineral fraction digestion using a 0.1M HCL/0.3M HF mixture and DMSO.

Our study showed that significant differences in the molecular structures of FAs, HAs and HNs occurred. Optical analysis confirmed the lower molecular weight of FAs with high amount of lignin-like compounds and the higher weighted aliphatic–aromatic structure of HAs. The HNs were characterized by a very pronounced and strong condensed structure associated with the highest molecular weight. HAs and HNs molecules exhibited an abundance of acidic, phenolic and amine functional groups at the aromatic ring and aliphatic chains, while FAs mainly showed the presence of methyl, methylene, ethenyl and carboxyl reactive groups. HS was characterized by high polydispersity related with their structure. FAs were characterized by ellipsoidal shape as being associated to the long aliphatic chains, while HAs and HNs revealed a smaller particle diameter and a more spherical shape caused by the higher intermolecular forcing between the particles.  

The observed trends directly indicate that individual HS fractions differ in behavior, formation, composition and sorption properties, which reflects their binding potential to different group of organic contaminants, but the general properties of individual fractions are similar and do not depend on the type of soil.

Acknowledgement: The studies were supported from the National Science Centre project No. 2018/29/N/ST10/01320 “Analysis of the fractional composition and sorption properties of humic substances in relation to various groups of organic contaminants”

How to cite: Ukalska-Jaruga, A., Bejger, R., Debaene, G., and Smreczak, B.: Structural characterization of soil organic matter individual fractions (fulvic acids, humic acids and humins) in relation to potential sorption of organic contaminants , EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-4125, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-4125, 2021.

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