Fluorescence of dissolved organic matter in natural waters

Fluorescence spectroscopy has recently found increasing use in investigations of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in terrestrial and marine aquatic environments since Coble et al. (1990; Nature 348, 432-435 ) applied the technique of excitation-emission-matrix (EEM) contouring to natural waters. Fluor...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: McDonald, Adrian
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Southampton 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/463225/
Description
Summary:Fluorescence spectroscopy has recently found increasing use in investigations of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in terrestrial and marine aquatic environments since Coble et al. (1990; Nature 348, 432-435 ) applied the technique of excitation-emission-matrix (EEM) contouring to natural waters. Fluorescence of natural waters mainly originates from two groups of organic compounds: humic substance (humic type fluorescence, HTF), and unknown compounds which exhibit spectra similar to those of the aromatic amino acids tryptophan and tyrosine (protein type fluorescence, PTF). The aim of this study was to use fluorescence spectroscopy, including EEM spectroscopy, to investigate the distribution and spectral characteristics of fluorescent DOM in natural waters. Concentrations of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) were measured using an ultra-violet (UV)/persulphate oxidation system, and DOM was also investigated using UV/visible absorption spectroscopy. A number of field surveys were undertaken, in order to investigate DOM in rivers, estuaries, and the coastal zone. The Beaulieu, Test, and Itchen estuaries, in the Solent region of southern England, and the Tweed estuary, in Northumberland, were studied. These estuaries provided contrasting surrounding terrestrial environments and levels of anthropogenic influence. The Test and Itchen estuaries are subject to considerable inputs of sewage and industrial effluent or wastewater, but the Beaulieu and Tweed estuaries are relatively undisturbed. The rivers along the south coast of England were also studied in four seasonal surveys. Ultrafiltration, using an Amicon 3000 nominal molecular weight cutoff membrane, provided "truly dissolved" and "colloidal" fractions, which provided insight into the molecular weight distribution of HTF, DOC, and absorbance. The distribution and spectral characteristics of fluorescence in the Northeast Atlantic Ocean was also investigated. HTF exhibited two main peaks on EEM spectra, at excitation wavelengths of ca. 230 nm and 330-345 nm, each with ...