Environmental science & technology | 2019

Diversity in the Mechanisms of Humin Formation during Composting with Different Materials.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Humins (HMs) play a very important role in various environmental processes and are crucial for regulating global carbon and nitrogen cycles in various ecosystems. Composting is a controlled decomposition process accompanied by the stabilization of organic solid waste materials. During composting, active fractions of organic substances can be transformed into HMs containing stable and complex macromolecules. However, the structural heterogeneity and formation mechanisms of HMs during composting with various substrates have not been clarified. Here, the structure and composition of HMs extracted from livestock manure (LM) and straw (SW) during composting were investigated by excitation-emission matrices spectroscopy and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The results showed that the stability and humification of LM-HM were lower than that of SW-HM. The parallel factor analysis components of the HM in LM composting contained the same fluorescent unit, and the intermediate of cellulose degradation affected the structure of the HM from SW composting. Structural equation modeling demonstrated that low-molecular-weight compounds were key factors in humification. On the basis of the structure and key factors impacting HM, we constructed two mechanisms for the formation of HM from different composting processes. The LM-HMs from different humification processes have multiple identical fluorescent structural units, and the high humification of SW is affected by its polysaccharide constituents, which contains a fluorescent component in their skeleton, providing a basis for studying HM in composting.

Volume 53 7
Pages \n 3653-3662\n
DOI 10.1021/acs.est.8b06401
Language English
Journal Environmental science & technology

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