Abstract

Water soluble organic carbon (WSOC) derived from biomass pyrolytic smoke is deposited through atmospheric aerosols, negatively affecting aquatic ecological quality and safety. However, the temperature-dependent molecular diversity and dynamic formation of smoke-derived WSOC remain poorly understood in water. Herein, we explored the molecular-level formation mechanism of pyrolytic smoke-derived WSOC in water to explain the evolution, heterogeneous correlations, and sequential responses of molecules and functional groups to increasing pyrolysis temperature. Two-dimensional correlation spectroscopy was used to innovatively establish the characteristic correlations between spectroscopy and Fourier transform-ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry. Temperature-dependent formation of WSOC exhibited diversity in absorbance/fluorescent components, unique/common molecules, and their chemical parameters, showing the simultaneous formation and degradation reactions. The common WSOC molecules with lower and higher degrees of oxidation showed significant positive and negative correlations with the fluorescent components, respectively. The primary sequential response of WSOC molecules to increasing pyrolysis temperature (lignin-like molecules → unsaturated hydrocarbons, condensed aromatic molecules → lipid-like/aliphatic-/peptide-like molecules) corresponded to the temperature response of functional groups (carboxylic/alcoholic → polysaccharides → aromatics/amides/phenolic/aliphatic groups), demonstrating well synergistic relationships between them. These novel findings will contribute to the comprehensive understanding and assessments of potential environmental behavior or risks of WSOC in aquatic ecosystems.

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