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Hydration of natural organic matter: Effect on sorption of organic compounds by humin and humic acid fractions vs original peat material
Year:
2004
Authors :
Borisover, Mikhail
;
.
Graber, Ellen
;
.
Volume :
38
Co-Authors:
Borisover, M., Inst. of Soil, Water/Environ. Sci., ARO, Volcani Center, P.O. Box 6, Bet Dagan 50250, Israel
Graber, E.R., Inst. of Soil, Water/Environ. Sci., ARO, Volcani Center, P.O. Box 6, Bet Dagan 50250, Israel
Facilitators :
From page:
4120
To page:
4129
(
Total pages:
10
)
Abstract:
Natural organic matter (NOM) hydration is found to change activity-based sorption of test organic compounds by as much as 2-3 orders of magnitude, depending on the compound and the specific NOM sorbent. This is demonstrated for sorption on humin, humic acid, and the NOM source material. Hydration assistance in organic compound sorption correlates with the ability of the sorbate to interact strongly with hydrated sorbents, demonstrating the important role of noncovalent polar links in organizing the sorbent structure. Differences in hydration effect between the sorbents are caused mainly by differences in compound-sorbent interactions in the dry state. For a given compound, hydration of the sorbent tends to equalize the sorption capability of the three sorbents. No correlation was found between the strength of sorbate-sorbent interactions or the type of sorbate functional groups and the extent of sorption nonlinearity. Sorption nonlinearity compared over the same sorbed concentration range is greater on the original NOM than on either of the two extracted fractions. In elucidating sorption mechanisms on hydrated NOM, it is important to explicitly consider the participation of water molecules in organic compound interactions in the NOM phase.
Note:
Related Files :
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concentration (parameters)
covalent bond
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Solvents
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water
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More details
DOI :
10.1021/es035357s
Article number:
0
Affiliations:
Database:
Scopus
Publication Type:
article
;
.
Language:
English
Editors' remarks:
ID:
30478
Last updated date:
02/03/2022 17:27
Creation date:
17/04/2018 00:54
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Scientific Publication
Hydration of natural organic matter: Effect on sorption of organic compounds by humin and humic acid fractions vs original peat material
38
Borisover, M., Inst. of Soil, Water/Environ. Sci., ARO, Volcani Center, P.O. Box 6, Bet Dagan 50250, Israel
Graber, E.R., Inst. of Soil, Water/Environ. Sci., ARO, Volcani Center, P.O. Box 6, Bet Dagan 50250, Israel
Hydration of natural organic matter: Effect on sorption of organic compounds by humin and humic acid fractions vs original peat material
Natural organic matter (NOM) hydration is found to change activity-based sorption of test organic compounds by as much as 2-3 orders of magnitude, depending on the compound and the specific NOM sorbent. This is demonstrated for sorption on humin, humic acid, and the NOM source material. Hydration assistance in organic compound sorption correlates with the ability of the sorbate to interact strongly with hydrated sorbents, demonstrating the important role of noncovalent polar links in organizing the sorbent structure. Differences in hydration effect between the sorbents are caused mainly by differences in compound-sorbent interactions in the dry state. For a given compound, hydration of the sorbent tends to equalize the sorption capability of the three sorbents. No correlation was found between the strength of sorbate-sorbent interactions or the type of sorbate functional groups and the extent of sorption nonlinearity. Sorption nonlinearity compared over the same sorbed concentration range is greater on the original NOM than on either of the two extracted fractions. In elucidating sorption mechanisms on hydrated NOM, it is important to explicitly consider the participation of water molecules in organic compound interactions in the NOM phase.
Scientific Publication
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