1 research outputs found
Proton and Aluminum Binding Properties of Organic Acids in Surface Waters of the Northeastern U.S.
A variety
of mathematical estimators have been used to quantify
the degree of protonation of naturally occurring organic acids. These
estimators range from monoprotic, diprotic, and triprotic analog models
to the discrete and continuous (Gaussian) distributions of a single
proton binding-dissociation. Natural water samples from two long-term
monitoring programs in the northeastern U.S. were used to quantify
proton- and aluminum-binding properties of naturally occurring organic
matter. Water chemistry observations were clustered into 0.05 pH intervals
(over 3.75β7.35 pH range) and fit to a triprotic analog model.
The model optimization indicates that about 5% of dissolved organic
carbon participates in ion binding, and organic acids are composed
of both strong and weak acids (i.e., p<i>K</i><sub>a1</sub> = 2.54, p<i>K</i><sub>a2</sub> = 6.19, and p<i>K</i><sub>a3</sub> = 7.52 for Adirondack samples). Binding between organic
acids and aluminum can substantially influence the acid behavior of
dissolved organic matter and the availability of the toxic form of
aluminum (i.e., inorganic monomeric aluminum)