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then gradually decreased to 20 nM. What is the concentration of H 2 O 2
accounted for by diurnal effects in the river waters?
(15) What is the steady state concentration of H 2 O 2 in natural waters? Find out
the production of H 2 O 2 in a natural water when its steady-state concentration
is 350 nM, microbial degradation 20 nM, and consumption by DOM photo-
degradation 30 nM.
Acknowledgments We thank Dr. Li Wen of China University of Geosciences, Wuhan for her
generous help during the manuscript preparation. This work was financially supported jointly
by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 1314765) and Institute of
geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China. This study was also partly supported
by Hiroshima University, Japan; University Turin, Italy; Brook Byers Institute for Sustainable
Systems at Georgia Institute of Technology, the United States; and Chinese Research Academy
of Environmental Sciences, China. This study acknowledges the Copyright (1990) by the
Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography, Inc.; copyright (1993) by The
Geochemical Society of Japan; reprinted from Analytica Chimica Acta, 627(2), Olasehinde EF,
Makino S, Kondo H, Takeda K, Sakugawa H, Application of Fenton reaction for nanomolar
determination of hydrogen peroxide in seawater, 270-276. Copyright (2008) with permission
from Elsevier; Copyright (2009) CSIRO; reprinted (adapted) with permission from Sakugawa
H, Kaplan IR, Tsai W, Cohen Y, Atmospheric hydrogen peroxide, Environ Sci Technol,
24(10), 1452-1462. Copyright (1990) American Chemical Society; Springer and the original
Biochemistry (Moscow), 66, 2001, 640-645, Hydrogen peroxide inhibits photosynthetic electron
transport in cells of cyanobacteria. Biochem (Moscow), Samuilov VD, Bezryadnov DB, Gusev
MV, Kitashov AV, Fedorenko TA, with kind permission from Springer Science and Business
Media; and Original Russian Text Copyright (2004) by Lobanov AV, Kholuiskaya SN, GG
Komissarov.
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