| Literature DB >> 25112581 |
William W Bennett1, David T Welsh2, Antoine Serriere2, Jared G Panther2, Peter R Teasdale2.
Abstract
Measurements of porewater alkalinity are fundamental to the study of organic matter mineralization in sediments, which plays an essential role in the global cycles of carbon and nutrients. A new colorimetric diffusive equilibration in thin film (DET) technique is described for measuring two-dimensional total alkalinity distributions in sediment porewaters at high resolution (1-2 mm(2)). Thin polyacrylamide hydrogel layers (0.8 mm) equilibrate with the porewater and, after removal, are immediately laid onto another hydrogel containing formic acid, which reacts with alkalinity-generating species, and the pH-indicator bromophenol blue. The resultant color change is quantified using computer-imaging densitometry. The lower limit of detection is 0.2 meq L(-1) and the upper measurement limit is 8 meq L(-1). Deployment in seagrass colonized sediment revealed high levels of spatial heterogeneity in the porewater alkalinity distribution, with concentrations ranging from 2.28 meq L(-1) in the overlying water to 5.13 meq L(-1) in some parts of the sediment. This is the first time that two-dimensional, high-resolution distributions of porewater alkalinity have been measured.Entities:
Keywords: Alkalinity; Biogeochemistry; DET; High-resolution; Porewater; Two-dimensional
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25112581 DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2014.07.042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemosphere ISSN: 0045-6535 Impact factor: 7.086