4.7 Article

Differential influences of forest floor-pyrolyzed biochar-derived and leached dissolved organic matter interaction with natural iron-bearing minerals in forest subsoil on the formation of mineral-associated soil organic matter

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 912, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.168724

Keywords

Deposition layer-derived natural iron-bearing; minerals; Dissolved organic matter; Adsorptive fractionation; Molecular diversity; Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass; spectrometry

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The study investigates the interaction between forest-derived dissolved organic matter (DOM) and natural iron-bearing minerals in forest subsoils. The results show that natural iron minerals have a higher capacity for sorbing leached DOM compared to biochar-derived DOM. Oxygen/nitrogen-rich polycyclic aromatic compounds and carboxylic-containing compounds in leached DOM preferentially sorb to iron minerals, while unsaturated and oxidized phenolic compounds in biochar-derived DOM have a stronger affinity for iron minerals. The composition of DOM profoundly shapes SOM formation and persistence in forest subsoils.
The vertical sequestration of dissolved organic matter (DOM) by iron minerals along the soil profile is assumed to be central to the long-term storage of the soil organic matter (SOM) pool. However, there is limited information available about how the interaction between DOM and natural iron-bearing minerals shape mineral SOM as-sociations quantitatively and qualitatively in forest subsoils. Here, we systematically investigated the influences of forest organic layer-pyrolyzed biochar-derived DOM (BDOM) and leached DOM (LDOM) on quantity, molecular composition, and diversity of deposition layer-derived iron minerals-associated OM by using Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry and other complementary spectroscopy. Results indicated natural iron minerals (FeOx1 and FeOx2) had a greater capacity for sorbing LDOM with higher aromaticity and molecular weight than those of BDOM, and the higher proportion of goethite and short-order-range phase in natural iron minerals was closely related to the increased OM adsorption capacity. We also observed the pref-erential sorption of oxygen/nitrogen-rich polycyclic aromatic compounds and carboxylic-containing compounds in LDOM and concurrent the potential release of lignin-like/aromatics compounds and carboxyl/nitrogen-less aliphatic compounds from native OM coprecipitates into the solution. However, unsaturated and oxidized phenolic compounds in BDOM had a stronger affinity for FeOx through hydrophobic partitioning and specific polar interactions, and concomitantly the partial release of nitrogen-free aliphatic and other carboxyl-rich compounds. More nitrogen structures in aromatic-containing compounds can improve the saturation level and polarity of BDOM. Compared with BDOM, LDOM exerted a stronger control over the exchange of native OM from subsoil natural iron-bearing minerals and substantially enhanced the molecular diversity of the reconstituted mineral-associated OM during the adsorptive fractionation. Overall, these findings suggest the compositional evolution of DOM profoundly shapes SOM formation and persistence in forest subsoils, which is the key to understanding DOM cycling and contaminant fate during its passage through the soil.

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