Rj. Smernik et Jm. Oades, Solid-state C-13-NMR dipolar dephasing experiments for quantifying protonated and non-protonated carbon in soil organic matter and model systems, EUR J SO SC, 52(1), 2001, pp. 103-120
Dipolar dephasing was investigated as a means for quantitatively differenti
ating protonated and non-protonated and molecularly mobile and rigid compon
ents in soil organic matter. We experimented on cellulose, hemicelluloses,
lignin, a protein, chitin, charcoal, palmitic acid and two waxes which serv
ed as model systems for components of soil organic matter. Dipolar dephasin
g decay curves showed significant deviation from the expected exponential d
ecay (for non-protonated and methyl carbons) and Gaussian decay (for non-me
thyl protonated carbons), partly due to rotational and dipolar modulation.
No signal is observed for most protonated carbon (excluding methyl carbon)
for a dipolar dephasing delay of 45 mus, and so we generated three subspect
ra, representing non-protonated, non-methyl protonated and methyl carbon cl
asses, requiring the acquisition of just the 0- and 45-mus dipolar dephased
spectra. This methodology was applied to eight samples of soil organic mat
ter, allowing the determination of relative contributions of overlapping re
sonances such as C-substituted and H-substituted aromatics (110-145 p.p.m.)
, carbohydrate anomeric and tannin (90-110 p.p.m.), and amino acid and meth
oxyl (45-65 p.p.m.). The waxes behaved aberrantly, probably because some of
their components are highly mobile. We determined accurately the exponenti
al dipolar dephasing decay rates of non-protonated carbon resonances, free
from the interference of rotational and dipolar modulations.