Abstract

Iron (Fe)-bearing mineral phases contribute disproportionately to adsorption of soil organic matter (SOM) due to their elevated chemical reactivity and specific surface area (SSA). However, the spectrum of Fe solid-phase speciation present in oxidation-reduction-active soils challenges analysis of SOM-mineral interactions and may induce differential molecular fractionation of dissolved organic matter (DOM). This work used paired selective dissolution experiments and batch sorption of postextraction residues to (1) quantify the contributions of Fe-bearing minerals of varying crystallinity to DOM sorption, and (2) characterize molecular fractionation using Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FT-ICR-MS). A substantial proportion of soil SSA was derived from extracted Fe-bearing phases, and FT-ICR-MS analysis of extracted DOM revealed distinct chemical signatures across Fe-OM associations. Sorbed carbon (C) was highly correlated with Fe concentrations, suggesting that Fe-bearing phases are strong drivers of sorption in these soils. Molecular fractionation was observed across treatments, particularly those dominated by short-range-order (SRO) mineral phases, which preferentially adsorbed aromatic and lignin-like formulas, and higher-crystallinity phases, associated with aliphatic DOM. These findings suggest Fe speciation-mediated complexation acts as a physicochemical filter of DOM moving through the critical zone, an important observation as predicted changes in precipitation may dynamically alter Fe crystallinity and C stability.

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