Structure of Humic Substances from Some Regions of the Amazon Assessed Coupling 3D Fluorescence Spectroscopy and CP/PARAFAC

The Amazon rainforest presents one of the greater biodiversity in the world and a huge and dynamic carbon reservoir, both in the vegetation and in the soil pools, so it is an attractive subject of study. In the present paper, humic acids from a toposequence of an Oxisol-Spodosol system associated wi...

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Published inJournal of the Brazilian Chemical Society Vol. 26; no. 6; pp. 1136 - 1142
Main Authors Santos, Cleber H., Nicolodelli, Gustavo, Romano, Renan A., Tadini, Amanda M., Villas-Boas, Paulino R., Montes, Célia R., Mounier, Stephane, Milori, Débora M. B. P.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Sociedade Brasileira de Química, SBQ 01.06.2015
Sociedade Brasileira de Química
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Summary:The Amazon rainforest presents one of the greater biodiversity in the world and a huge and dynamic carbon reservoir, both in the vegetation and in the soil pools, so it is an attractive subject of study. In the present paper, humic acids from a toposequence of an Oxisol-Spodosol system associated with kaolin was studied using fluorescence emission-excitation matrix combined with parallel factor analysis. The combined techniques allowed to assess the intensities of the two different fluorophores associated with humic acid with core consistency diagnoses of 84.2%. The results for the Humiluvic Spodosol seem to corroborate the model of the supramolecular structure of humic acid, because the intensity ratio of fluorophores does not remain in the profile. Therefore, the use of these combined techniques can provide information about the transformation processes of humic substances in soils, becoming an interesting analytical tool for studying these substances of different soils.
ISSN:0103-5053
1678-4790
1678-4790
DOI:10.5935/0103-5053.20150076