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Binding of Calcium and Magnesium Ions to Terrestrial Chromophoric Dissolved Organic Matter (CDOM): A Combination of Steady-State and Time-Resolved Fluorescence Study

Juan Liu, Ruiya Zhou, Xu Zhang

2021Water13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Revealing the binding properties of calcium ion (Ca2+) and magnesium ion (Mg2+) to terrestrial chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) facilities understanding the effect of natural water components on the photophysics of dissolved organic matter. Steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence spectrometry, and dynamic light scattering were applied to investigate the fluorescence quenching process of CDOM by Ca2+ and Mg2+. Due to a remarkable decrease of the steady-state fluorescence intensity and a slight decrease of fluorescence lifetime, the fluorescence quenching of CDOM by cations mainly occurred through a static process. The fluorescence quenching was profound under longer excitation and emission wavelengths. The binding constant (K, L/mol) for Ca2+ to CDOM ranged from 4.29 to 5.09 (lgK), which was approximately one order of magnitude higher than that of Mg2+ to CDOM (3.86 to 4.56). Nevertheless, the efficiency of CDOM fluorescence quenching by Ca2+, Mg2+ was much lower than that by Cu2+. Fluorescence decay became faster in the presence of a high concentration of Ca2+ (>20 mg/L) and Mg2+ (>50 mg/L). In the presence of these two metal ions, particularly for Ca2+, the lifetime of CDOM excited states shifted to the relatively small value side, indicating fluorescence quenching of CDOM mainly occurred through the interaction of Ca2+/Mg2+ with relatively long-lived fluorophores.

Topics & Concepts

Colored dissolved organic matterQuenching (fluorescence)FluorescenceChemistryDissolved organic carbonIonAnalytical Chemistry (journal)MagnesiumExcited stateSteady state (chemistry)Atomic physicsEnvironmental chemistryPhysicsOpticsPhysical chemistryPhytoplanktonOrganic chemistryNutrientMarine and coastal ecosystemsAtmospheric chemistry and aerosolsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate
Binding of Calcium and Magnesium Ions to Terrestrial Chromophoric Dissolved Organic Matter (CDOM): A Combination of Steady-State and Time-Resolved Fluorescence Study | Litcius