Abstract

In soil environments, the sequestration and transformation of organic carbon are closely associated with soil minerals. Birnessite (MnO2) is known to strongly interact with soil dissolved organic matter (DOM), but the microscopic distribution and molecular transformation of soil DOM on birnessite are still poorly understood. In this study, the coupled sorption and oxidation of soil DOM on birnessite were investigated at both the microscopic scale and the molecular level. Spherical aberration corrected scanning transmission electron microscopy (Cs-STEM) results revealed, at the nano- to sub-nanoscale, that DOM was located both on the surfaces and within the interflakes or pore spaces of birnessite, and DOM within the interflakes displayed a higher oxidation state than that on the surfaces. Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FT-ICR-MS) results suggested that a portion of phenolic compounds were preferentially sorbed and oxidized, resulting in the formation of compounds with higher oxygen contents and polymeric products. Our Cs-STEM and FT-ICR-MS results highlighted the significance of organo-mineral associations in the microscopic mineral structure for the reactivity of organic carbon and provided the molecular evidence for the transformation of soil DOM by birnessite, which contributed to the understanding of the dynamics of soil dissolved organic carbon.

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