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Dissolved Organic Matter Contains Ketones Across a Wide Range of Molecular Formulas.

Nico MitschkeSahithya Phani Babu VemulapalliThorsten Dittmar
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2024)
The carbonyl functionality of natural organic matter (NOM) is poorly constrained. Here, we treated Suwannee River NOM (SRNOM) with ammonium acetate and sodium cyanoborohydride to convert ketone-containing compounds by reductive amination to their corresponding primary amines. The total dissolved nitrogen content increased by up to 275% after amination. Up to 30% of the molecular formulas of SRNOM contained isomers with ketone functionalities as detected by ultrahigh-resolution mass spectrometry. Most of these isomers contained one or two keto groups. At least 3.5% of the oxygen in SRNOM was bound in ketone moieties. The conversion of reacted compounds increased linearly with O/H values of molecular formulas and was predictable from the elemental composition. The mean conversion rate of reacted compounds nearly followed a log-normal distribution. This distribution and the predictability of the proportion of ketone-containing isomers solely based on the molecular formula indicated a stochastic distribution of ketones across SRNOM compounds. We obtained isotopically labeled amines by using 15 N-labeled ammonium acetate, facilitating the identification of reaction products and enabling NMR spectroscopic analysis. 1 H, 15 N HSQC NMR experiments of derivatized samples containing less than 20 μg of nitrogen confirmed the predominant formation of primary amines, as expected from the reaction pathway.
Keyphrases
  • organic matter
  • mass spectrometry
  • single molecule
  • magnetic resonance
  • high resolution
  • ionic liquid
  • molecular docking
  • liquid chromatography