Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1197162 Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis 2013 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Thermally assisted hydrolysis and methylation (THM) in the presence of tetramethylammonium hydroxide (TMAH) of a range of layers in eight peat cores from the Ryggmossen peatland (central Sweden) was carried out. This yielded a complex mixture including components I (methylated 4-isopropenylphenol (IUPAC name: 1-methoxy-4-(prop-1-en-2-yl)benzene)), IIa/b (methylated cis/trans 3-(4′-hydroxyphen-1-yl)but-2-enoic acid (IUPAC names: (E/Z)-methyl 3-(4-methoxyphenyl)but-2-enoate)) and III (methylated 3-(4′-hydroxyphen-1-yl)but-3-enoic acid (IUPAC name: methyl 3-(4-methoxyphenyl)but-3-enoate)) which have been assigned as products from “bound” sphagnum acid. The proportion of the individual sphagnum acid products relative to total Sphagnum yield revealed the simultaneous degradation of all four components in the unsaturated layer (which is characterised by oxic conditions) concomitant with the decrease of the total Sphagnum yield. Following their degradation in the surficial oxic layer, the total amounts of the sphagnum acid thermochemolysis products stabilise in the deeper seasonally saturated peat. With a further increase in burial depth, in the permanently saturated anoxic peat, the distribution of thermochemolysis products becomes dominated by I. The increase of σI% relative to σ(IIa/b and III)% indicates that the mode of binding of sphagnum acid into the peat changes as a function of burial depth and hence position relative to the water table. Therefore the relative amounts of the four sphagnum acid THM products show some promise as indicators of redox conditions in young surficial peats.

► THM in the presence of TMAH liberated four Sphagnum phenols from surficial peat. ► Compare changes in distributions of four Sphagnum phenols as a function of peat depth. ► Changes in distributions of the Sphagnum phenols reflect redox conditions of the peat. ► Increased proportion of I relative to IIa/b and III reflects anoxia in surficial peats.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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