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Registro Completo |
Biblioteca(s): |
Embrapa Solos. |
Data corrente: |
13/07/2011 |
Data da última atualização: |
06/05/2024 |
Tipo da produção científica: |
Artigo em Periódico Indexado |
Autoria: |
SONG, G.; HAYES, M. H. B.; NOVOTNY, E. H.; SIMPSON, A. J. |
Afiliação: |
GUIXUE SONG, UNIVERSIDADE DE LIMERICK; MICHAEL H. B. HAYES, UNIVERSIDADE DE LIMERICK; ETELVINO HENRIQUE NOVOTNY, CNPS; ANDRE J. SIMPSON, UNIVERSIDADE DE TORONTO. |
Título: |
Isolation and fractionation of soil humin using alkaline urea and dimethylsulphoxide plus sulphuric acid. |
Ano de publicação: |
2011 |
Fonte/Imprenta: |
Naturwissenschaften, v. 98, p. 7-13, 2011. |
DOI: |
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00114-010-0733-4 |
Idioma: |
Inglês |
Conteúdo: |
Humin, the most recalcitrant and abundant organic fraction of soils and of sediments, is a significant contributor to the stable carbon pool in soils and is important for the global carbon budget. It has significant resistance to transformations by microorganisms. Based on the classical operational definition, humin can include any humic-type substance that is not soluble in water at any pH. We demonstrate in this study how sequential exhaustive extractions with 0.1 M sodium hydroxide (NaOH) + 6 M urea, followed by dimethylsulphoxide (DMSO) + 6% (v/v) sulphuric acid (H2SO4) solvent systems, can extract 70–80% of the residual materials remaining after prior exhaustive extractions in neutral and aqueous basic media. Solid-state 13C NMR spectra have shown that the components isolated in the base + urea system were compositionally similar to the humic and fulvic acid fractions isolated at pH 12.6 in the aqueous media. The NMR spectra indicated that the major components isolated in the DMSO + H2SO4 medium had aliphatic hydrocarbon associated with carboxyl functionalities and with lesser amounts of carbohydrate and peptide and minor amounts of lignin-derived components. The major components will have significant contributions from long-chain fatty acids, waxes, to cuticular materials. The isolates in the DMSO + H2SO4 medium were compositionally similar to the organic components that resisted solvation and remained associated with the soil clays. It is concluded that the base + urea system released humic and fulvic acids held by hydrogen bonding or by entrapment within the humin matrix. The recalcitrant humin materials extracted in DMSO + H2SO4 are largely biological molecules (from plants and the soil microbial population) that are likely to be protected from degradation by their hydrophobic moieties and by sorption on the soil clays. Thus, the major components of humin do not satisfy the classical definitions for humic substances which emphasise that these arise from microbial or chemical transformations in soils of the components of organic debris. MenosHumin, the most recalcitrant and abundant organic fraction of soils and of sediments, is a significant contributor to the stable carbon pool in soils and is important for the global carbon budget. It has significant resistance to transformations by microorganisms. Based on the classical operational definition, humin can include any humic-type substance that is not soluble in water at any pH. We demonstrate in this study how sequential exhaustive extractions with 0.1 M sodium hydroxide (NaOH) + 6 M urea, followed by dimethylsulphoxide (DMSO) + 6% (v/v) sulphuric acid (H2SO4) solvent systems, can extract 70–80% of the residual materials remaining after prior exhaustive extractions in neutral and aqueous basic media. Solid-state 13C NMR spectra have shown that the components isolated in the base + urea system were compositionally similar to the humic and fulvic acid fractions isolated at pH 12.6 in the aqueous media. The NMR spectra indicated that the major components isolated in the DMSO + H2SO4 medium had aliphatic hydrocarbon associated with carboxyl functionalities and with lesser amounts of carbohydrate and peptide and minor amounts of lignin-derived components. The major components will have significant contributions from long-chain fatty acids, waxes, to cuticular materials. The isolates in the DMSO + H2SO4 medium were compositionally similar to the organic components that resisted solvation and remained associated with the soil clays. It is concluded that the base + ure... Mostrar Tudo |
Palavras-Chave: |
Soil humin. |
Thesaurus Nal: |
soil organic matter. |
Categoria do assunto: |
P Recursos Naturais, Ciências Ambientais e da Terra |
Marc: |
LEADER 02719naa a2200193 a 4500 001 1895801 005 2024-05-06 008 2011 bl uuuu u00u1 u #d 024 7 $ahttps://doi.org/10.1007/s00114-010-0733-4$2DOI 100 1 $aSONG, G. 245 $aIsolation and fractionation of soil humin using alkaline urea and dimethylsulphoxide plus sulphuric acid.$h[electronic resource] 260 $c2011 520 $aHumin, the most recalcitrant and abundant organic fraction of soils and of sediments, is a significant contributor to the stable carbon pool in soils and is important for the global carbon budget. It has significant resistance to transformations by microorganisms. Based on the classical operational definition, humin can include any humic-type substance that is not soluble in water at any pH. We demonstrate in this study how sequential exhaustive extractions with 0.1 M sodium hydroxide (NaOH) + 6 M urea, followed by dimethylsulphoxide (DMSO) + 6% (v/v) sulphuric acid (H2SO4) solvent systems, can extract 70–80% of the residual materials remaining after prior exhaustive extractions in neutral and aqueous basic media. Solid-state 13C NMR spectra have shown that the components isolated in the base + urea system were compositionally similar to the humic and fulvic acid fractions isolated at pH 12.6 in the aqueous media. The NMR spectra indicated that the major components isolated in the DMSO + H2SO4 medium had aliphatic hydrocarbon associated with carboxyl functionalities and with lesser amounts of carbohydrate and peptide and minor amounts of lignin-derived components. The major components will have significant contributions from long-chain fatty acids, waxes, to cuticular materials. The isolates in the DMSO + H2SO4 medium were compositionally similar to the organic components that resisted solvation and remained associated with the soil clays. It is concluded that the base + urea system released humic and fulvic acids held by hydrogen bonding or by entrapment within the humin matrix. The recalcitrant humin materials extracted in DMSO + H2SO4 are largely biological molecules (from plants and the soil microbial population) that are likely to be protected from degradation by their hydrophobic moieties and by sorption on the soil clays. Thus, the major components of humin do not satisfy the classical definitions for humic substances which emphasise that these arise from microbial or chemical transformations in soils of the components of organic debris. 650 $asoil organic matter 653 $aSoil humin 700 1 $aHAYES, M. H. B. 700 1 $aNOVOTNY, E. H. 700 1 $aSIMPSON, A. J. 773 $tNaturwissenschaften$gv. 98, p. 7-13, 2011.
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Registros recuperados : 6 | |
2. | | SONG, G.; NOVOTNY, E. H.; SIMPSON, A. J.; CLAPP, C. E.; HAYES, M. H. B. Sequential exhaustive extraction of a Mollisol soil, and characterizations of humic components, including humin, by solid and solution state NMR. European Journal of Soil Science, Oxford, v. 59, n. 3, p. 505-516, Jun. 2008.Tipo: Artigo em Periódico Indexado | Circulação/Nível: Internacional - A |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Solos. |
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3. | | SIMPSON, A. J.; SONG, G.; SMITH, E.; LAM, B.; NOVOTNY, E. H.; HAYES, M. H. B. Unraveling the structural components of soil humin by use of solution-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Environmental Science & Technology, v. 41, n. 3, p. 876-883, Feb. 2007.Tipo: Artigo em Periódico Indexado | Circulação/Nível: Internacional - A |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Solos. |
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4. | | BYRNE, C. M. P.; HAYES, M. H. B.; KUMAR, R.; NOVOTNY, E. H.; LANIGAN, G.; RICHARDS, K. G.; FAY, D.; SIMPSON, A. J. Compositional changes in the hydrophobic acids fraction of drainage water from different land management practices. Water Research, v. 44, n. 15, p. 4379-4390, Aug. 2010.Tipo: Artigo em Periódico Indexado | Circulação/Nível: A - 1 |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Solos. |
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5. | | LYSAK, D. H.; GRISI, M.; MARABLE, K.; CONLEY, G. M.; MICHAL, C. A.; MOXLEY-PAQUETTE, V.; WOLFF, W. W.; DOWNEY, K.; KOCK, F. V. C.; COSTA, P. M.; RONDA, K.; MORAES, T. B.; STEINER, K.; COLNAGO, L. A.; SIMPSON, A. J. Exploring the Potential of Broadband Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor Micro-Coil Nuclear Magnetic Resonance for Environmental Research. Molecules, v. 28, 5080, 2023. 14 p.Tipo: Artigo em Periódico Indexado | Circulação/Nível: A - 2 |
Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Instrumentação. |
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6. | | VASCONCELOS, A. T. R.; FERREIRA, H. B.; BIZARRO, C. V.; BONATTO, S. L.; CARVALHO, M. O.; PINTO, P. M.; ALMEIDA, D. F.; ALMEIDA, L. G. P.; ALMEIDA, R.; ALVES-FILHO, L.; ASSUNÇÃO, E. N.; AZEVEDO, V. A. C.; BOGO, M. R.; BRIGIDO, M. M.; BROCCHI, M.; BURITY, H. A.; CAMARGO, A. A.; CAMARGO, S. S.; CAREPO, M. S.; CARRARO, D. M.; CASCARDO, J. C. de M.; CASTRO, L. A.; CAVALCANTI, G.; CHEMALE, G.; COLLEVATTI, R. G.; CUNHA, C. W.; DALLAGIOVANNA, B.; DAMBRÓS, B. P.; DELLAGOSTIN, O. A.; FALCÃO, C.; FANTINATTI-GARBOGGINI, F.; FELIPE, M. S. S.; FIORENTIN, L.; FRANCO, G. R.; FREITAS, N. S. A.; FRÍAS, D.; GRANGEIRO, T. B.; GRISARD, E. C.; GUIMARÃES, C. T.; HUNGRIA, M.; JARDIM, S. N.; KRIEGER, M. A.; LAURINO, J. P.; LIMA, L. F. A.; LOPES, M. I.; LORETO, E. L. S. MADEIRA, H. M. F.; MANFIO, G. P.; MARANHÃO, A. Q.; MARTINKOVICS, C. T.; MEDEIROS, S. R. B.; MOREIRA, M. A. M.; NEIVA, M.; RAMALHO-NETO, C. E.; NICOLÁS, M. F.; OLIVEIRA, S. C.; PAIXÃO, R. F. C.; PEDROSA, F. O.; PENA, S. D. J.; PEREIRA, M.; PEREIRA-FERRARI, L.; PIFFER, I.; PINTO, L. S; POTRICH, D. P.; SALIM, A. C. M.; SANTOS, F. R.; SCHMITT, R.; SCHNEIDER, M. P. C.; SCHRANK, A.; SCHRANK, I. S.; SCHUCK, A. F.; SEUANEZ, H, N.; SILVA, D. W.; SILVA, R.; SILVA, S. C.; SOARES, C. M. A.; SOUZA, K. R.; SOUZA, R. C.; STAATS, C. C.; STEFFENS, M. B. R.; TEIXEIRA, S. M. R.; URMENYI, T. P.; VAINSTEIN, M. H.; ZUCCHERATO, L. W.; SIMPSON, A. J. G.; ZAHA, A. Swine and poultry pathogens: the complete genome sequences of two strains of Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae and a strain of Mycoplasma synoviae. Journal of Bacteriology, Washington, v. 187, n. 16, p. 5568-5577, Aug. 2005.Biblioteca(s): Embrapa Soja. |
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Registros recuperados : 6 | |
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