| Literature DB >> 24188626 |
Zimin Wei1, Xinyu Zhao, Chaowei Zhu, Beidou Xi, Yue Zhao, Xue Yu.
Abstract
This study was conducted to assess the degree of humification in dissolved organic matter (DOM) from different composts, and their environmental impact after soil amending based on fluorescence measurements (emission, excitation, synchronous scan, and excitation-emission matrix [EEM]). The compost sources studied included dairy cattle manure (DCM), kitchen waste (KW), cabbage waste (CW), tomato stem waste (TSW), municipal solid waste (MSW), green waste (GW), chicken manure (CM), and peat (P). Conventional and EEM fluorescence spectroscopy indicated that the DOM of these composts contained compounds similar in structure but comparisons between conventional fluorescence parameters and fluorescence regional integration of EEM fluorescence spectra showed that the DOM was different in degree of humification. Regression analysis demonstrated significant corrections between major fluorescence parameters. In hierarchical cluster analysis, these composts were clustered into 2 groups and 4 subgroups, and projection pursuit regression analysis further ranked the compost sources as KW, CW, P>CM, DCM, TW, GW>MSW in their degree of humification in DOM.Entities:
Keywords: Degree of humification; Dissolved organic matter (DOM); Fluorescence spectra; Mature composts
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24188626 DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2013.08.087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemosphere ISSN: 0045-6535 Impact factor: 7.086