Solar radiation mineralizes
dissolved organic matter (DOM) to dissolved inorganic carbon through
photochemical reactions (DIC photoproduction) that are influenced
by iron (Fe) and pH. This study addressed as to what extent Fe contributes
to the optical properties of the chromophoric DOM (CDOM) and DIC photoproduction
at different pH values. We created the associations of Fe and DOM
(Fe-DOM) that cover the range of loadings of Fe on DOM and pH values
found in freshwaters. The introduced Fe enhanced the light absorption
by CDOM independent of pH. Simulated solar irradiation decreased the
light absorption by CDOM (i.e., caused photobleaching). Fe raised
the rate of photobleaching and steepened the spectral slopes of CDOM
in low pH but resisted the slope steepening in neutral to alkaline
pH. The combination of a low pH (down to pH 4) and high Fe loading
on DOM (up to 3.5 μmol mg DOM
–1
) increased
the DIC photoproduction rate and the apparent quantum yields for DIC
photoproduction up to 7-fold compared to the corresponding experiments
at pH >6 or without Fe. The action spectrum for DIC photoproduction
shifted toward the visible spectrum range at low pH in the presence
of Fe. Our results demonstrated that Fe can contribute to DIC photoproduction
by up to 86% and produce DIC even at the visible spectrum range in
acidic waters. However, the stimulatory effect of Fe is negligible
at pH >7.
This study compared results of nanoparticle number concentration measurements collected from 74 instruments hosted across 50 laboratories, providing users with useful discussion and reference data to assess and benchmark their measurement capability.
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