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N isotope heterogeneity in soil organic matter: a new tool to characterise N cycles

ReferenceBB/E006663/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor Professor David Manning
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Professor Keith Thomas
Institution Newcastle University
DepartmentCivil Engineering and Geosciences
Funding typeResearch
Value (£) 93,034
StatusCompleted
TypeResearch Grant
Start date 01/01/2007
End date 30/09/2007
Duration9 months

Abstract

Using thermal analysis, we have developed methods to quantify pools of soil carbon with differing stabilities. We have developed a globally unique instrumental system, that takes gases evolved during combustion for both chemical and isotopic analysis (C, O). This allows us to discriminate C pools, to demonstrate that C isotopic heterogeneity naturally present in plant tissue disappears during decomposition, and to distinguish carbonate C and organic C in mixtures that cannot be separated physically. This proposal is to build a UNIQUE interface to take gases from the thermal analysis system, separating evolved N species and preparing them for N isotope analysis. Technically this is challenging and novel, as cellulosic material generates reduced N gases (e.g. C2N2) whilst lignin (and chars) produce oxidised N gases (NO). The interface needs both reducing and oxidising furnaces, with gas sampling valves and a computer control system that allows it to subsample evolved gases from the thermal analysis system at specified intervals corresponding to the decomposition of individual components of SOM samples. This approach is analogous to existing compound specific IRMS tools and is feasible; what is novel is its ability to deal with reduced and oxidised N species simultaneously, and hence to deliver N isotope data for naturally heterogeneous materials. The new system will give the following information: 1) masses of discrete N pools; 2) chemical compositions of gases which relate to N's chemical environment within each pool, and 3) N isotope ratios for each pool. Through collaboration, the system will be tested using samples from other N turnover studies. It offers a novel tool to track N in soil systems, quantifying specific real pools with differing stability, constraining the chemical host for N within soil organic matter and using N isotope ratios (testing both natural abundances and labelled materials) to observe turnover of pools with differing stabilities.

Summary

Nitrogen turnover is an essential part of the plant-soil system. Organic N, within dead plant tissue or other biological products, is not available for plant uptake until it has been mineralised. Differing soil organic matter pools have different stabilities, and so N in soils rich in reactive soil organic matter (SOM) is much more rapidly mineralised than that in soils with stable SOM. In each case, the bulk chemistry of the organic matter differs, with implications for the chemistry and availability of N. In reactive SOM, amine N is readily available for mineralisation. In stable SOM, aromatic and related C compounds exist, and N within aromatic ring structures is much less readily mineralised. Models of N turnover allocate measured N to pools with differing stability. At present these are not rigorously related to direct measurements of the N content of discrete SOM pools. Our proposal develops a tool to achieve this. We have shown that SOM loses N in different gaseous forms as it is heated by temperature-programmed combustion in a thermal analysis system. Initially, reduced (cyanide-based) gases are evolved from the decomposition of aliphatic SOM. N oxides are then evolved as aromatic compounds break down. This chemical heterogeneity reflects differing structural hosts for N within SOM, which are measured from observed weight losses. We observe C isotope heterogeneity between these hosts, begging the question that natural abundances of N isotopes also vary. Our proposal is to build a completely new combination of instrumentation, linking existing thermal analysis and stable isotope instrumentation via a novel interface that is capable of taking different N gases from the thermal analysis machine (which gives a continuous record of weight loss, hence proportions of discrete components) and presenting them to the isotope ratio mass spectrometer for determination of N isotope ratios. It will then be possible to use N isotope fingerprints to track nitrogen turnover, in fertiliser-soil-plant systems. This system will provide for the first time a tool to investigate chemical and natural/labelled isotopic heterogeneity for N within soil organic matter, enabling N turnover models to be related to measurable parameters from agricultural soils.
Committee Closed Committee - Agri-food (AF)
Research TopicsX – not assigned to a current Research Topic
Research PriorityX – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative Tools and Resources Development Fund (TRDF) [2006-2015]
Funding SchemeX – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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