Abstract

It has been found by reversed-phase chromatography that humic acids obtained from vermicomposts of different duration of vermicomposting consist of a hydrophilic and a hydrophobic fractions, the hydrophobic fraction having a substantially lower content of charged, probably carboxylic, groups. A change in the sign of the temperature dependence of the heat capacity of diluted aqueous solutions of humic acids at approximately 58 degrees C has been found by differential scanning microcalorimetry, which indicates an increase in the hydration of hydrophobic groups. A jumpwise increase in heat capacity in the temperature range from 86 to 90 degrees C was also found, which is due likely to the hydration of hydrophobic groups in the interior of "micelles", due to the "devitrification" of the hydrophobic nucleus of micelle-like structures. It was shown that increasing the duration of vermicomposting leads to an increase in the relative content of the hydrophobic fraction of humic acids and in the cooperativity of the thermodynamic transition, which manifests itself in a jump of heat capacity, which probably results from the increase in the "micelle" size.

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