Abstract

Five humic and three fulvic acids, extracted from Argentine soils, were methylated and oxidized with KMnO* solution. The oxidation products were extracted into ethyl acetate, remethylated, separated by preparative gas chromatography and identified by comparing their mass and micro-IR spectra with those of authentic specimens. The major oxidation products from the humic acids were benzenetetra, -penta-, and -tricarboxylic and hydroxybenepentacarboxylic acid. The major compounds isolated from the fulvic acid oxidation products were aside from benzenecarboxylic and phenolic acids, substantial amounts of ethyl-benzylsulfonate and N-methyl-benzylsulfonamide, one complex aromatic ester and two anhydrides. The origin of the S-containing compounds is uncertain; they could be impurities. Weight ratios of benzenecarboxylic to phenolic acids averaged 5·8 for humic acids but only 0·9 for fulvic acids, suggesting an enrichment in phenolic structures in the fulvic acids. Possible structural arrangements for humic and fulvic acids are discussed.

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