Centro Interdipartimentale di Risonanza Magnetica Nucleare per l'Ambiente, l'Agroalimentare e i Nuovi Materiali (CERMANU), Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II, via Università 100, 80055 Portici, Italy.
Anal Bioanal Chem. 2013 Jan;405(1):109-24. doi: 10.1007/s00216-012-6363-2. Epub 2012 Sep 11.
Advances in water chemistry in the last decade have improved our knowledge about the genesis, composition, and structure of dissolved organic matter, and its effect on the environment. Improvements in analytical technology, for example Fourier-transform ion cyclotron (FT-ICR) mass spectrometry (MS), homo and hetero-correlated multidimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, and excitation emission matrix fluorimetry (EEMF) with parallel factor (PARAFAC) analysis for UV-fluorescence spectroscopy have resulted in these advances. Improved purification methods, for example ultrafiltration and reverse osmosis, have enabled facile desalting and concentration of freshly collected DOM samples, thereby complementing the analytical process. Although its molecular weight (MW) remains undefined, DOM is described as a complex mixture of low-MW substances and larger-MW biomolecules, for example proteins, polysaccharides, and exocellular macromolecules. There is a general consensus that marine DOM originates from terrestrial and marine sources. A combination of diagenetic and microbial processes contributes to its origin, resulting in refractory organic matter which acts as carbon sink in the ocean. Ocean DOM is derived partially from humified products of plants decay dissolved in fresh water and transported to the ocean, and partially from proteinaceous and polysaccharide material from phytoplankton metabolism, which undergoes in-situ microbial processes, becoming refractory. Some of the DOM interacts with radiation and is, therefore, defined as chromophoric DOM (CDOM). CDOM is classified as terrestrial, marine, anthropogenic, or mixed, depending on its origin. Terrestrial CDOM reaches the oceans via estuaries, whereas autochthonous CDOM is formed in sea water by microbial activity; anthropogenic CDOM is a result of human activity. CDOM also affects the quality of water, by shielding it from solar radiation, and constitutes a carbon sink pool. Evidence in support of the hypothesis that part of marine DOM is of terrestrial origin, being the result of a long-term carbon sedimentation, has been obtained from several studies discussed herein.
在过去十年中,水化学的进展提高了我们对溶解有机物的成因、组成和结构及其对环境影响的认识。分析技术的改进,例如傅里叶变换离子回旋共振(FT-ICR)质谱(MS)、同核和异核多维核磁共振(NMR)光谱以及激发发射矩阵荧光法(EEMF)与平行因子(PARAFAC)分析用于紫外荧光光谱学,促成了这些进展。改进的纯化方法,例如超滤和反渗透,使得易于对新鲜采集的 DOM 样品进行脱盐和浓缩,从而补充了分析过程。尽管其分子量(MW)仍未定义,但 DOM 被描述为低 MW 物质和更大 MW 生物分子(例如蛋白质、多糖和细胞外大分子)的复杂混合物。人们普遍认为海洋 DOM 来源于陆地和海洋来源。成岩作用和微生物过程的组合促成了其起源,导致作为海洋碳汇的难降解有机物。海洋 DOM 部分来自植物腐烂物在淡水中溶解并输送到海洋的腐殖产物,部分来自浮游植物代谢的蛋白质和多糖物质,这些物质经历原位微生物过程,变得难降解。一些 DOM 与辐射相互作用,因此被定义为发色溶解有机物(CDOM)。CDOM 根据其来源分为陆地、海洋、人为或混合。陆地 CDOM 通过河口进入海洋,而自生 CDOM 则由微生物活动在海水中形成;人为 CDOM 是人类活动的结果。CDOM 还通过遮蔽太阳辐射来影响水质,并构成碳汇池。从本文讨论的一些研究中获得了支持海洋 DOM 部分来源于陆地、是长期碳沉积的结果这一假设的证据。