Restructuring of a peat in interaction with multivalent cations: effect of cation type and aging time.

It is assumed to be common knowledge that multivalent cations cross-link soil organic matter (SOM) molecules via cation bridges (CaB). The concept has not been explicitly demonstrated in solid SOM by targeted experiments, yet. Therefore, the requirements for and characteristics of CaB remain unident...

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Main Authors: Yamuna Kunhi Mouvenchery, Alexander Jaeger, Adelia J A Aquino, Daniel Tunega, Dörte Diehl, Marko Bertmer, Gabriele Ellen Schaumann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3672098?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-9fe1348fb45b49b483968fe5144ab11d2020-11-25T01:29:40ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0186e6535910.1371/journal.pone.0065359Restructuring of a peat in interaction with multivalent cations: effect of cation type and aging time.Yamuna Kunhi MouvencheryAlexander JaegerAdelia J A AquinoDaniel TunegaDörte DiehlMarko BertmerGabriele Ellen SchaumannIt is assumed to be common knowledge that multivalent cations cross-link soil organic matter (SOM) molecules via cation bridges (CaB). The concept has not been explicitly demonstrated in solid SOM by targeted experiments, yet. Therefore, the requirements for and characteristics of CaB remain unidentified. In this study, a combined experimental and molecular modeling approach was adopted to investigate the interaction of cations on a peat OM from physicochemical perspective. Before treatment with salt solutions of Al(3+), Ca(2+) or Na(+), respectively, the original exchangeable cations were removed using cation exchange resin. Cation treatment was conducted at two different values of pH prior to adjusting pH to 4.1. Cation sorption is slower (>>2 h) than deprotonation of functional groups (<2 h) and was described by a Langmuir model. The maximum uptake increased with pH of cation addition and decreased with increasing cation valency. Sorption coefficients were similar for all cations and at both pH. This contradicts the general expectations for electrostatic interactions, suggesting that not only the interaction chemistry but also spatial distribution of functional groups in OM determines binding of cations in this peat. The reaction of contact angle, matrix rigidity due to water molecule bridges (WaMB) and molecular mobility of water (NMR analysis) suggested that cross-linking via CaB has low relevance in this peat. This unexpected finding is probably due to the low cation exchange capacity, resulting in low abundance of charged functionalities. Molecular modeling demonstrates that large average distances between functionalities (∼3 nm in this peat) cannot be bridged by CaB-WaMB associations. However, aging strongly increased matrix rigidity, suggesting successive increase of WaMB size to connect functionalities and thus increasing degree of cross-linking by CaB-WaMB associations. Results thus demonstrated that the physicochemical structure of OM is decisive for CaB and aging-induced structural reorganisation can enhance cross-link formation.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3672098?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yamuna Kunhi Mouvenchery
Alexander Jaeger
Adelia J A Aquino
Daniel Tunega
Dörte Diehl
Marko Bertmer
Gabriele Ellen Schaumann
spellingShingle Yamuna Kunhi Mouvenchery
Alexander Jaeger
Adelia J A Aquino
Daniel Tunega
Dörte Diehl
Marko Bertmer
Gabriele Ellen Schaumann
Restructuring of a peat in interaction with multivalent cations: effect of cation type and aging time.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Yamuna Kunhi Mouvenchery
Alexander Jaeger
Adelia J A Aquino
Daniel Tunega
Dörte Diehl
Marko Bertmer
Gabriele Ellen Schaumann
author_sort Yamuna Kunhi Mouvenchery
title Restructuring of a peat in interaction with multivalent cations: effect of cation type and aging time.
title_short Restructuring of a peat in interaction with multivalent cations: effect of cation type and aging time.
title_full Restructuring of a peat in interaction with multivalent cations: effect of cation type and aging time.
title_fullStr Restructuring of a peat in interaction with multivalent cations: effect of cation type and aging time.
title_full_unstemmed Restructuring of a peat in interaction with multivalent cations: effect of cation type and aging time.
title_sort restructuring of a peat in interaction with multivalent cations: effect of cation type and aging time.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description It is assumed to be common knowledge that multivalent cations cross-link soil organic matter (SOM) molecules via cation bridges (CaB). The concept has not been explicitly demonstrated in solid SOM by targeted experiments, yet. Therefore, the requirements for and characteristics of CaB remain unidentified. In this study, a combined experimental and molecular modeling approach was adopted to investigate the interaction of cations on a peat OM from physicochemical perspective. Before treatment with salt solutions of Al(3+), Ca(2+) or Na(+), respectively, the original exchangeable cations were removed using cation exchange resin. Cation treatment was conducted at two different values of pH prior to adjusting pH to 4.1. Cation sorption is slower (>>2 h) than deprotonation of functional groups (<2 h) and was described by a Langmuir model. The maximum uptake increased with pH of cation addition and decreased with increasing cation valency. Sorption coefficients were similar for all cations and at both pH. This contradicts the general expectations for electrostatic interactions, suggesting that not only the interaction chemistry but also spatial distribution of functional groups in OM determines binding of cations in this peat. The reaction of contact angle, matrix rigidity due to water molecule bridges (WaMB) and molecular mobility of water (NMR analysis) suggested that cross-linking via CaB has low relevance in this peat. This unexpected finding is probably due to the low cation exchange capacity, resulting in low abundance of charged functionalities. Molecular modeling demonstrates that large average distances between functionalities (∼3 nm in this peat) cannot be bridged by CaB-WaMB associations. However, aging strongly increased matrix rigidity, suggesting successive increase of WaMB size to connect functionalities and thus increasing degree of cross-linking by CaB-WaMB associations. Results thus demonstrated that the physicochemical structure of OM is decisive for CaB and aging-induced structural reorganisation can enhance cross-link formation.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3672098?pdf=render
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