TY - JOUR
T1 - Composition and radiocarbon age of HF-resistant soil organic matter in a Podzol and a Cambisol
AU - Eusterhues, K.
AU - Rumpel, C.
AU - Kögel-Knabner, I.
N1 - Funding Information:
The research was funded by the Priority Programme 1090 ‘Soils as sinks and sources for CO 2 ’ of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft. We thank Maria Greiner for laboratory assistance, Marianne Hanzlik (Department Chemie) for help with SEM and Heike Knicker for insisting with her curiosity to the point of almost being obnoxious – it was worth it. Thanks are also due to Texas Instruments Deutschland GmbH for providing silicon wafers. Valuable comments by Sylvie Derenne and two anonymous reviewers greatly improved the manuscript.
PY - 2007/8
Y1 - 2007/8
N2 - Hydrofluoric acid (HF) is able to dissolve most minerals, so it is often used to enrich organic matter (OM) in soils and sediments, though significant OM losses sometimes occur. The objective of this study was to examine these carbon losses and the hypothesis that HF dissolves the mineral-associated OM along with its mineral carrier. We compared composition, radiocarbon activity and particle morphology of untreated and HF-treated soil samples, using bulk samples, density fractions > 2 g cm-3 and fine particle size fractions < 6.3 μm from a Haplic Podzol and a Dystric Cambisol. A positive correlation between HF-soluble organic carbon and organic carbon in the dense fraction confirms a linkage between the dissolved fraction and the mineral-associated OM fraction. However, treatment of heavy soil fractions shows that removal of the mineral-associated OM fraction is not complete. In the topsoil carbon losses amount to only 20-30% of the mineral-associated C, compared to 40-55% for the sub-soil of the Dystric Cambisol and 70-85% for the sub-soil of the Haplic Podzol. Compositional OM change as a consequence of HF treatment was not detected in upper soil horizons, but was substantial for the lower horizons. With depth or age of soil horizon, the HF-soluble OM becomes enriched in O-alkyl C, aryl C, and carbonyl C compared to the HF-resistant OM. The HF-soluble material in all horizons of the Dystric Cambisol is dominated by high alkyl C content, whereas O-alkyl C dominates in deeper horizons of the Haplic Podzol. In A horizons, radiocarbon ages of the HF-resistant OM fraction were similar, but slightly younger than for bulk soil radiocarbon ages. In contrast, in the sub-soil horizons the HF-resistant fraction was up to 2000 yr older than the bulk soil age.
AB - Hydrofluoric acid (HF) is able to dissolve most minerals, so it is often used to enrich organic matter (OM) in soils and sediments, though significant OM losses sometimes occur. The objective of this study was to examine these carbon losses and the hypothesis that HF dissolves the mineral-associated OM along with its mineral carrier. We compared composition, radiocarbon activity and particle morphology of untreated and HF-treated soil samples, using bulk samples, density fractions > 2 g cm-3 and fine particle size fractions < 6.3 μm from a Haplic Podzol and a Dystric Cambisol. A positive correlation between HF-soluble organic carbon and organic carbon in the dense fraction confirms a linkage between the dissolved fraction and the mineral-associated OM fraction. However, treatment of heavy soil fractions shows that removal of the mineral-associated OM fraction is not complete. In the topsoil carbon losses amount to only 20-30% of the mineral-associated C, compared to 40-55% for the sub-soil of the Dystric Cambisol and 70-85% for the sub-soil of the Haplic Podzol. Compositional OM change as a consequence of HF treatment was not detected in upper soil horizons, but was substantial for the lower horizons. With depth or age of soil horizon, the HF-soluble OM becomes enriched in O-alkyl C, aryl C, and carbonyl C compared to the HF-resistant OM. The HF-soluble material in all horizons of the Dystric Cambisol is dominated by high alkyl C content, whereas O-alkyl C dominates in deeper horizons of the Haplic Podzol. In A horizons, radiocarbon ages of the HF-resistant OM fraction were similar, but slightly younger than for bulk soil radiocarbon ages. In contrast, in the sub-soil horizons the HF-resistant fraction was up to 2000 yr older than the bulk soil age.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=34547127156&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.orggeochem.2007.04.001
DO - 10.1016/j.orggeochem.2007.04.001
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:34547127156
SN - 0146-6380
VL - 38
SP - 1356
EP - 1372
JO - Organic Geochemistry
JF - Organic Geochemistry
IS - 8
ER -