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XANES Studies of Oxidation States of Sulfur in Aquatic and Soil Humic Substances
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1998
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EngineeringSoil Organic MatterSoil MineralogySoil Humic SubstancesChemistryOrganic GeochemistryEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental GeochemistrySoil PollutionSulfone S.Analytical ChemistryXanes StudiesBiogeochemistryChemical FormSoil ContaminationOxidation StatesEnvironmental EngineeringSoil ChemistryEnvironmental RemediationXanes Results
Abstract Sulfur K‐edge x‐ray absorption near‐edge structure spectroscopy (XANES) was used to identify multiple organic S oxidation states in aquatic and soil humic substances. The XANES results suggest that S in humic substances exists in four major oxidation groups similar to sulfate ester, sulfonate, sulfoxide, and thiol‐sulfide. Thiol S cannot be separated from sulfide S and must be considered as a single thiol‐sulfide peak. The second derivative spectra suggest the existence of thiophene and sulfone S. The relative quantities of each major S form in our humic samples were estimated based on the integrated cross section of each s → p transition peak corresponding to different S oxidation states in the S K‐edge XANES spectra. The XANES results of the four humic samples used in this study appear to reflect the environmental settings where the humic substances originally formed. The percentage of the most reduced organic S (thiol‐sulfide and possibly thiophene) in humic substances follows the sequence: aquatic samples > organic soil sample > mineral soil sample. The percentage of most oxidized S (sulfate group) was the greatest in the humic substance from a mineral soil and the lowest in the aquatic humic substances.