Probing Mineral-Organic
Interfaces in Soils and Sediments
Using Optical Photothermal Infrared Microscopy
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Posted on 2025-01-02 - 19:03
Interactions among microbes, minerals, and organic matter
are key
controls on carbon, nutrient, and contaminant dynamics in soils and
sediments. However, probing these interactions at relevant scales
and through time remains an analytical challenge due to both their
complex nature and the need for tools permitting nondestructive and
real-time analysis at sufficient spatial resolution. Here, we demonstrate
the ability and provide analytical recommendations for the submicron-scale
characterization of complex mineral-organic microstructures using
optical photothermal infrared (O-PTIR) microscopy. Compared to conventional
infrared techniques, O-PTIR spectra collected at submicron resolution
of environmentally relevant mineral and organic reference compounds
demonstrated similar spectral quality and sensitivity. O-PTIR detection
sensitivity was greatest for highly crystalline minerals and potentially
for low molecular weight organic compounds. Due to photothermal effects,
O-PTIR was more sensitive toward organics than minerals compared to
conventional IR approaches, even when organics were mineral-bound.
Moreover, O-PTIR resolved mineral-bound and unbound organics in a
complex mixture at submicron (<500 nm) resolution. Finally, we
provide best practices for artifact-free analysis of organic and mineral
samples by determining the appropriate laser power using damage thresholds.
Our results highlight the potential of O-PTIR microscopy for nondestructive
and time-resolved analysis of dynamic microbe-mineral-organic matter
interactions in soils and sediments.
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Jamoteau, Floriane; Kansiz, Mustafa; Unger, Miriam; Keiluweit, Marco (2024). Probing Mineral-Organic
Interfaces in Soils and Sediments
Using Optical Photothermal Infrared Microscopy. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.4c09258Â