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Selective Photochemical Oxidation of Reduced Dissolved Organic Sulfur to Inorganic Sulfate.

Brett A Poulin
Published in: Environmental science & technology letters (2023)
The chemical nature and stability of reduced dissolved organic sulfur (DOS Red ) have implications on the biogeochemical cycling of trace and major elements across fresh and marine aquatic environments, but the underlying processes governing DOS Red stability remain obscure. Here, dissolved organic matter (DOM) was isolated from a sulfidic wetland, and laboratory experiments quantified dark and photochemical oxidation of DOS Red using atomic-level measurement of sulfur X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy. DOS Red was completely resistant to oxidation by molecular oxygen in the dark and underwent rapid and quantitative oxidation to inorganic sulfate (SO 4 2- ) in the presence of sunlight. The rate of DOS Red oxidation to SO 4 2- greatly exceeded that of DOM photomineralization, resulting in a 50% loss of total DOS and 78% loss of DOS Red over 192 h of irradiance. Sulfonates (DOS SO3 ) and other minor oxidized DOS functionalities were not susceptible to photochemical oxidation. The observed susceptibility of DOS Red to photodesulfurization, which has implications on carbon, sulfur, and mercury cycling, should be comprehensively evaluated across diverse aquatic environments of differing DOM composition.
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