Environmental Engineering Reference
In-Depth Information
(10) What is the new reaction for photosynthesis? Explain how photo processes
can affect photosynthesis in waters.
(11) Explain the flow diagram on how photoinduced and microbial processes
work together for the degradation of DOM and POM in natural waters.
(12) What are the key interactions between photoinduced and microbial processes
in natural waters?
Acknowledgments We thank Mr. Cui Lifeng of Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy
of Sciences, China for his generous assistance. This work was financially supported jointly
by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos.40525011, 1314765) and
the Chinese Academy of Sciences (KZCX2-YW-102). This work was partly supported by
Brook Byers Institute for Sustainable Systems, Georgia Institute of Technology, United States
and National Science Foundation of the United States award 0854416; University Turin,
Italy; Chinese Research Academy of Environmental Sciences, China; Northwest Missouri
State University, USA; Kyoto University, Japan; and Hiroshima University, Japan. This study
acknowledges the reprinted (adapted) with permission from Minakata D, Li K, Westerhoff P,
Crittenden J, Development of a group contribution method to predict aqueous phase hydroxyl
radical (HO•) reaction rate constants, Environ Sci Technol, 43(16), 6220-6227. Copyright (2009)
American Chemical Society; reprinted by permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd: [Nature
Rev Microbiol] (Lovley DR, Bug juice: harvesting electricity with microorganisms, 4, 497-508),
copyright (2006); reprinted (adapted) with permission from Pelmenschikov V, Blomberg MRA,
Siegbahn PEM, Crabtree RH, A Mechanism from Quantum Chemical Studies for Methane
Formation in Methanogenesis, JACS, 124, 4039-4049. Copyright (2002) American Chemical
Society; reprinted (adapted) with permission from Ebner S, Jaun B, Goenrich M, Thauer RK,
Harmer J, Binding of coenzyme B induces a major conformational change in the active site of
methyl-coenzyme M reductase, JACS, 132, 567-575. Copyright (2010) American Chemical
Society; reprinted from Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, 178 (2), Koschorreck
M, Wendt-Potthoff K, Scharf B, Richnow HH, Methanogenesis in the sediment of the acidic
Lake Caviahue in Argentina, 197-204. Copyright (2008), with permission from Elsevier;
Copyright (1996) by the Association for the Sciences of Limnol Oceanogr, Inc.; Copyright
(2000) by the Association for the Sciences of Limnol Oceanogr, Inc.; Copyright (2011) by The
Geochemical Society of Japan; and Shiga prefecture office, Japan.
References
Allard B, Boren H, Pettersson C, Zhang G (1994) Degradation of humic substances by UV irra-
diation. Environ Int 20:97-101
Allen JM, Lucas S, Allen SK (1996) Formation of hydroxyl radical ( · OH) in illuminated surface
waters contaminated with acidic mine drainage. Environ Toxicol Chem 15:107-113
Amador JA, Alexander M, Zika RG (1989) Sequential photochemical and microbial degradation
of organic molecules bound to humic acid. Appl Environ Microbiol 55:2843-2849
Amon RMW, Benner R (1994) Rapid cycling of high-molecular-weight dissolved organic matter
in the ocean. Nature 369:549-552
Amon R, Benner R (1996) Photochemical and microbial consumption of dissolved organic carbon
and dissolved oxygen in the Amazon River system. Geochim Cosmochim Acta 60:1783-1792
Anastasio C, Newberg JT (2007) Sources and sinks of hydroxyl radical in sea-salt particles. J
Geophys Res 112:D10306. doi: 10.1029/2006JD008061
Arakaki T, Faust BC (1998) Sources, sinks, and mechanisms of hydroxyl radical (•OH) photoproduc-
tion and consumption in authentic acidic continental cloud waters from Whiteface mountain, New
York: The role of the Fe (r)(r = II, III) photochemical cycle. J Geophys Res 103:3487-3504
Search WWH ::




Custom Search