Contrasting effects of photochemical and microbial degradation on Cu(II) binding with fluorescent DOM from different origins
Effects of photochemical and microbial degradation on variations in composition and molecular-size of dissolved organic matter (DOM) from different sources (algal and soil) and the subsequent influence on Cu(II) binding were investigated using UV–Vis, fluorescence excitation-emission matrices couple...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Environmental pollution (1987) 2018-08, Vol.239, p.205-214 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Effects of photochemical and microbial degradation on variations in composition and molecular-size of dissolved organic matter (DOM) from different sources (algal and soil) and the subsequent influence on Cu(II) binding were investigated using UV–Vis, fluorescence excitation-emission matrices coupled with parallel factor analysis, flow field-flow fractionation (FlFFF), and metal titration. The degradation processes resulted in an initial rapid decline in the bulk dissolved organic carbon and chromophoric and fluorescent DOM components, followed by a small or little decrease. Specifically, photochemical reaction decreased the aromaticity, humification and apparent molecular weights of all DOM samples, whereas a reverse trend was observed during microbial degradation. The FlFFF fractograms revealed that coagulation of both protein- and humic-like DOM induced an increase in molecular weights for algal-DOM, while the molecular weight enhancement for allochthonous soil samples was mainly attributed to the self-assembly of humic-like components. The Cu(II) binding capacity of algal-derived humic-like and fulvic-like DOM consistently increased during photo- and bio-degradation, while the soil-derived DOM exhibited a slight decline in Cu(II) binding capacity during photo-degradation but a substantial increase during microbial degradation, indicating source- and degradation-dependent metal binding heterogeneities. Pearson correlation analysis demonstrated that the Cu(II) binding potential was mostly related with aromaticity and molecular size for allochthonous soil-derived DOM, but was regulated by both DOM properties and specific degradation processes for autochthonous algal-derived DOM. This study highlighted the coupling role of inherent DOM properties and external environmental processes in regulating metal binding, and provided new insights into metal-DOM interactions and the behavior and fate of DOM-bound metals in aquatic environments.
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•Effect of photo-/microbial degradation on metal binding with DOM from different origins was studied.•Different variations in abundance, composition, and size were observed for different DOMs under photo-/bio-degradation.•logKM increased during algal-DOM degradation but varied for soil-DOM depending on degradation.•Metal binding with allochthonous DOM was controlled by aromaticity and molecular size.•Metal binding with autochthonous DOM was regulated by both DOM properties and degradation processes.
Metal-DOM |
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ISSN: | 0269-7491 1873-6424 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.envpol.2018.03.108 |