We present the benzene polycarboxylic acid (BPCA) method for assessing pyrogenic carbon (PyC) in the environment. The compound-specific approach uniquely provides simultaneous information about the characteristics, quantity and isotopic composition (13C and 14C) of PyC.
Fire-derived, pyrogenic carbon (PyC), sometimes called black carbon (BC), is the carbonaceous solid residue of biomass and fossil fuel combustion, such as char and soot. PyC is ubiquitous in the environment due to its long persistence, and its abundance might even increase with the projected increase in global wildfire activity and the continued burning of fossil fuel. PyC is also increasingly produced from the industrial pyrolysis of organic wastes, which yields charred soil amendments (biochar). Moreover, the emergence of nanotechnology may also result in the release of PyC-like compounds to the environment. It is thus a high priority to reliably detect, characterize and quantify these charred materials in order to investigate their environmental properties and to understand their role in the carbon cycle.
Here, we present the benzene polycarboxylic acid (BPCA) method, which allows the simultaneous assessment of PyC's characteristics, quantity and isotopic composition (13C and 14C) on a molecular level. The method is applicable to a very wide range of environmental sample materials and detects PyC over a broad range of the combustion continuum, i.e., it is sensitive to slightly charred biomass as well as high temperature chars and soot. The BPCA protocol presented here is simple to employ, highly reproducible, as well as easily extendable and modifiable to specific requirements. It thus provides a versatile tool for the investigation of PyC in various disciplines, ranging from archeology and environmental forensics to biochar and carbon cycling research.
In a complete combustion process, biomass or fossil fuel is converted into CO2, H2O and inorganic residues (ash). However, under local or temporal oxygen limitations, combustion becomes incomplete and pyrolysis takes place, producing a solid organic residue known as char1. These charred residues are also referred to as pyrogenic organic matter (PyOM) and mainly consist of pyrogenic carbon (PyC) or, synonymously, black carbon (BC)2-4. Charring processes are omnipresent and can be part of both natural and anthropogenic combustion5-6. Wildfire is an important natural process, intrinsic to most ecosystems, which produces a significant quantity of PyC each year4,7-10. Similarly, the burning of fossil fuel for energy production in industry and transport presents an important anthropogenic source of PyC11-13. Both sources contribute to the ubiquity of PyC in the environment: PyC is present in the air, in the form of aerosols13-14, in water as particulate or dissolved organic matter15-17, as well as in ice cores18-19, soils20-21, and sediments22-24 in sizes varying from m to nm (e.g., large charred tree trunk after a forest fire or nano-scale soot particles that escape a diesel engine exhaust). The ubiquity of PyC in the environment is not only due to large production rates but also to its long persistence and relative stability against degradation25-26. Although exact turnover times have not yet been established and may depend upon specific environmental conditions27-28, it seems clear that PyC is less readily decomposed into CO2 than most other forms of organic carbon29-30. This observation has an important implication for the global C cycle: as charred materials store PyC for a relatively long time, they sequester C in organic forms that would otherwise be rapidly respired as CO2, thus reducing atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations over time31-32.
Besides the climate mitigating aspect, chars have further environmentally relevant properties. Their high porosity, large surface area and negative surface charge can immobilize hazardous compounds33 and improve soil fertility34-35. The recognition of chars as a potentially beneficial soil amendment led to the emerging field of so-called biochar technology36. Biochar will likely be produced on large scales in the coming years and thus significantly increase PyC abundance in soils37. Moreover, the occurrence of wildfires and the burning of fossil fuels are also projected to remain high over the course of the 21th century, continuously contributing large quantities of PyC to the environment11,38-39. Another increasingly important source of PyC is likely to be nanotechnology that also uses PyC-like compounds40-41. It is thus crucial to detect, characterize and quantify these pyrogenic materials accurately in order to investigate their properties and understand their role in the environment.
Here, we present the use of a state-of-the-art compound-specific approach to analyze PyC in various samples: the most recent generation of the benzene polycarboxylic acid (BPCA) method42. This method is broadly applicable within PyC research as it directly targets the "backbone" of PyC: its polycyclic condensed structures that form during the thermal treatment43-45 and that are therefore inherent to all the various forms of PyC5,46. However, these structures are not directly assessable by chromatographic means, due to their size and heterogeneity. In order to chromatographically analyze such pyrogenic compounds, PyC is first digested with nitric acid under high temperature and pressure, which breaks the large polycyclic structures down into its building blocks, the individual BPCAs (cf. Figure 1). The BPCAs are then, after a few purification steps, amenable to chromatographic analysis20,42. PyC is thus isolated and analyzed on a molecular level and can be used to quantify PyC abundance in environmental compartments20,42. The BPCA method additionally characterizes the investigated PyC when relative yields of B3-, B4-, B5- and B6CA are compared (cf. Figure 1): The respective proportion of differently carboxylated BPCAs is linked to the size of the original polycyclic structures and is therefore indicative of PyC's quality and pyrolysis temperature44,47-48. Moreover, the presented method allows for the determination of the C isotopic composition (13C and 14C) of PyC because the individual BPCAs, deriving directly from pure PyC structures, can be isotopically analyzed after isolation (cf. Figure 1, steps 5 and 6)49. Compound-specific isotopic analysis of PyC is of great interest50 as it can be used, e.g., to distinguish between the precursor biomass of chars in tropical regions51-52, to derive the age of charred materials53-54 or to trace PyC in C cycling studies with an isotopic label26,55-56. Further information about PyC as well as the BPCA method's history, development and applications in particular can be found in Wiedemeier, 201457, from where part of the above paragraphs and part of the discussion were compiled.
1. General Precautions and Preparations
2. HNO3 Digestion
3. Removal of Cations
4. Removal of Apolar Compounds
5. Chromatography
6. Wet Oxidation of Purified BPCAs for Subsequent 13C and 14C Analysis
We recommend to test the method set-up by measuring a suite of well-described PyC materials ("black carbon reference materials") that have extensively been used for various method developments and comparisons in the literature44,48,69-77. Information on the reference materials is available from the University of Zurich (http://www.geo.uzh.ch/en/units/physische-geographie-boden-biogeographie/services/black-carbon-reference-materials).
The described procedure allows baseline separation of all BPCA target compounds by HPLC. The chromatograms of the reference materials 'chernozem' (silty soil with a significant PyC content) and grass char (made from Oryza Sativa) are shown in Figure 2. By adjusting the chromatography parameters in Tables 1 and 2 (e.g., chromatography temperature, pH of solvent A or flow rate, etc.), the separation can be further modified for specific needs42,63.
Quantitative analysis of the reference materials' chromatograms with external standards (step 5.3.) should yield the PyC values depicted in Figure 3. Please note that slight changes in the procedure (e.g., the omission of step 3 or 4 in specific cases), can lead to higher PyC values. Generally, recoveries should be checked with pure BPCA standards:spiked reference materials can help to detect disproportionate losses in steps 3 and 4 and yield information about the chromatography performance in step 5 42,63.
Table 3 shows the 13C and 14C values that are obtained when purified BPCAs of reference materials are analyzed for their carbon isotopic content after step 6. For reliable results, it is imperative to collect sufficient amounts of BPCA-C (e.g., > 30 µg BPCA-C for current accelerator mass spectrometers, cf. Figure 4) and to take all possible measures to minimize contamination of the sample by extraneous C 49.
Besides checking the method set-up with reference materials as described above, it is highly advisable to prepare and measure samples in replicates, both for PyC quantification (step 5) and subsequent compound-specific 13C and 14C analyses of BPCAs (step 6).
Figure 1: The BPCA Analysis Procedure. In the protocol step 2, the PyC polycyclic aromatic condensed structures are digested, producing the different BPCAs, which are then further cleaned (steps 3 and 4) and chromatographically analyzed and separated (step 5). After wet oxidation (step 6), the purified BPCAs are amenable to compound-specific isotopic analysis (13C and 14C) on isotope-ratio mass spectrometers. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Chromatograms for BPCA Separation. Shown are the black carbon reference materials "chernozem" (a) and "grass char" (b). Baseline separation is achieved for all the BPCA target compounds (B6CA; B5CA; 1,2,4,5-. 1,2,3,5-, 1,2,3,4-B4CA; 1,2,4-, 1,2,3-B3CA)42. Information on the black carbon reference materials is available from the University of Zurich (http://www.geo.uzh.ch/en/units/physische-geographie-boden-biogeographie/services/black-carbon-reference-materials). This figure was modified from Wiedemeier et al. 201342 and is reprinted with permission from Elsevier. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Replicated PyC Measurements of Different Black Carbon Reference Materials. Error bars for laboratory replicates are smaller than symbol size and the coefficient of variation averaged 5% (min: 1%, max: 10%).This figure was modified from Wiedemeier et al. 201342 and is reprinted with permission from Elsevier. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Radiocarbon (14C) Values for B5CA and B6CA Isolated from a Modern and a Fossil Char. The given error is composed of corrections for instrumental accelerator mass spectrometer background and of the blank for wet oxidation. The solid gray line represents an idealized line for the mixture of the real F14C value of the respective sample and the determined mean external contamination. This figure was modified from Gierga et al. 201449 and is reprinted with permission from Elsevier. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
mobile phase A | 20 ml ortho phosphoric acid (85%) in 980 ml ultrapure water |
mobile phase B | acetonitrile |
column | C18 reversed phase (cf. material list for details) |
column temperature | 15 °C |
flow rate | 0.4 ml min-1 |
identification | retention time, UV absorption at 216 nm |
quantification | external standards of BPCAs |
pressure | ca. 120 bar |
Table 1: Chromatography Settings.
time | mobile phase B |
[min] | [vol %] |
0 | 0.5 |
5 | 0.5 |
25.9 | 30 |
26 | 95 |
28 | 95 |
28.1 | 0.5 |
30 | 0.5 |
Table 2: Mixing Gradient of Mobile Phases.
bulk char | BPCA | |||
δ13C [‰ vs. VPDB] | ||||
chestnut char | -27.4a | ±0.4a | -27.7 | ±0.8 |
maize char | -12.9 | ±0.4 | -13.0 | ±0.4 |
F14C [%] | ||||
modern char | 1.142b | ±0.004b | 1.13 | ±0.013 |
fossil char | 0.003b | ±0.001b | 0.014 | ±0.001 |
Table 3: Carbon Isotopic Values (δ13C and F14C) of Reference Char Materials and Compound-Specific Isotopic Analysis of the Corresponding BPCAs. The BPCA values represent B6CA and B5CA that were collected simultaneously in step 5. However, isotopic analysis of individual BPCAs can be achieved analogously when BPCAs are collected separately. Bulk char data is from Yarnes et al. (2011) 73 for the chestnut char (a) and from Gierga et al. (2014) 49 for the fossil and modern char (b). Errors for the δ13C measurements are standard errors from triplicates while errors for the F14C measurements (bulk char: ETH-50456, ETH-50458; BPCA: ETH-62324, ETH-62335) are derived from error propagation64.
The BPCA method has several important advantages when compared to other available PyC methods78-79: i) it detects PyC over a broad range of the combustion continuum, i.e., it is sensitive to slightly charred biomass as well as high temperature chars and soot42,70, ii) it can simultaneously characterize16,44,80-81, quantify20,42 and isotopically analyze PyC49-50,66,73,82-83, iii) it is applicable to a very wide range of environmental sample materials42,70, and iv) its methodology has been intensely reviewed and could be put in a consistent framework with the assessments of other PyC methods44,47,70,84-85. For all these reasons, the BPCA approach is arguably the most versatile PyC method available to date, whose underlying assumptions are well constrained and have been continuously tested against other methods.
The above protocol consolidates the strengths of previous BPCA methods into a single procedure, is highly reproducible, simple to employ and can easily be extended and modified to specific requirements. For example, when chromatography is conducted with a pH gradient instead of an organic solvent, on-line isotope-ratio monitoring of BPCAs is possible42, obviating the need for the wet oxidation step. Similarly, the removal of cations and/or apolar compounds (steps 3 and 4) may be skipped when it is known that particular samples do not contain any such compounds (e.g., in some cases of laboratory-produced chars).
Like every PyC method, the BPCA procedure has some limitations, too. In this regard, it is important to note that the BPCA approach inherently underestimates total PyC quantity in the samples: the method destroys large parts of the PyC polycyclic structures in order to extract their BPCA building blocks, thus not quantitatively recovering all PyC in the form of BPCAs20,86. Conversion factors had been proposed in the past to translate BPCA yields into total PyC contents. However, finding one correct conversion factor is practically impossible because of the heterogeneous degree of aromatic condensation in most chars41,48,80,86. In many cases, PyC quantities of samples are compared relative to each other42,81,87-88. We then suggest not to use any conversion factors and to simply report BPCA data "as measured"48. In particular cases, when BPCA yields are taken to estimate absolute PyC quantities24,89-90, the originally published conversion factor20 of 2.27 seems appropriate as it converts the BPCA yields into conservative estimates of PyC contents86.
Another difficulty with PyC methods is that they are potentially sensitive to interfering, non-PyC materials and/or that PyC is produced during the analysis itself, leading to an overestimation of the actual PyC content in samples70. The BPCA approach is very robust against such interfering materials70, does not produce any PyC by itself16,70,86 and is conservative in nature (cf. above paragraph). Even graphite, a chemically very similar material to PyC but of petrogenic origin, does not interfere with BPCA measurements(Schneider, M. P. W. unpublished results. Zurich, (2013)). So far, the only known non-PyC interferences for the BPCA method are some condensed, aromatic pigments of fungi91, which should be quantitatively negligible for the vast majority of studies86. The BPCA method with its simultaneous qualitative, quantitative and 13C and 14C isotopic information is thus an excellent tool for the investigation of PyC in various disciplines.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The authors thankfully acknowledge support by the following funding sources: the University of Zurich Research Priority Program “global change and biodiversity”, the Swiss National Science Foundation projects 134452, 131922, 143891, 119950 and 134847, and the Deep Carbon Observatory – Deep Energy award 60040915.
ball mill | Retsch | N/A | ball mill with carbon-free grinding jars and balls (Retsch MM 200 with agate grinding jars and balls) |
combustion oven | Nabertherm | N/A | combustion oven/muffle furnace with a temperature of 500 °C (Nabertherm L40/11 or similar) |
pressure bombs with PTFE pressure chambers, quartz digestion tubes with quartz lids |
Seif Aufschlusstechnik, Unterschleissheim, Germany | N/A | Helma U. Rudolf Seif Aufschlusstechnik Fastlingerring 67 85716 Unterschleissheim Germany Tel: (+49) 89 3108181 |
vortex mixer | common lab supply | N/A | |
oven | Thermo Scientific | 50051010 | drying oven with constant temperature (Thermo Scientific Heraeus or similar) |
vacuum manifold system with PTFE connectors |
Machery Nagel | Chromabond 730151 730106 |
ftp://ftp.mn-net.com/english/Instruction_leaflets/Chromatography/SPE/CHROMABOND_VK_DE_EN.pdf |
reusable glass syringes with disposable glass fibre filters | Machery Nagel | 730172 730192 |
http://www.mn-net.com/SPEStart/SPEaccessories/EmptySPEcolumns/tabid/4285/language/en-US/Default.aspx |
25 mL volumetric glass flasks | common lab supply | N/A | In contrast to all other glassware, do not combust to ensure volumetric accuracy. Instead, clean in acid bath, with ultrasound and with ultrapure water. |
chromatographic glass columns with frit and PTFE stopcock and glass wool | custom made | N/A | dimensions of glass columns: ca. 40cm long, ca. 1.5 cm in diameter |
cation exchange resin | Sigma Aldrich | 217514 | Dowex 50 WX8 400 |
conductivity meter | WTW | 300243 | LF 320 Set |
100 mL conical flasks for freeze drier | common lab supply | N/A | |
liquid nitrogen | common lab equipment | N/A | for snap-freezing the aequous solution after removal of cations |
freeze dryer | Christ | N/A | Alpha 2-4 LD plus |
C18 solid phase extraction cartridges | Supelco | 52603-U | http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/product/supelco/52603u?lang=de®ion=CH |
2.5 mL glass test tubes | Agilent Technologies | 5022-6534 | http://www.chem.agilent.com/store/en_US/Prod-5022-6534/5022-6534?navAction=push&navCount=0 |
concentrator | Eppendorf | 5305000.100 | |
1.5 mL HPLC autosampler vials | depending on HPLC | N/A | |
6 mL fraction collector vials | depending on HPLC | N/A | |
high purity N2 gas | common lab equipment | N/A | |
12 mL borosilicate gas tight vials | Labco | 538W | http://www.labco.co.uk/europe/gas.htm#doublewad12ml |
needles | B Braun | 4665643 | http://www.bbraun.ch/cps/rde/xchg/cw-bbraun-de-ch/hs.xsl/products.html?prid=PRID00000510 |
high purity He gas | common lab equipment | N/A | |
Materials | |||
HNO3 (65%) p.a. | Sigma Aldrich | 84378 | http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/product/sial/84378?lang=de®ion=CH |
2M HCl | Sigma Aldrich | 258148 | mix with ultrapure water to achieve 2M solution |
2M NaOH | Sigma Aldrich | 71691 | mix with ultrapure water to achieve 2M solution |
methanol | Sigma Aldrich | 34860 | http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/product/sial/34860?lang=de®ion=CH |
water | Milli-Q | Z00QSV0WW | Type 1 grade, optimized for low carbon |
orthophosphoric acid | Sigma Aldrich | 79606 | http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/product/fluka/79606?lang=de®ion=CH |
acetonitrile | Sigma Aldrich | 34851 | http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/product/sial/34851?lang=de®ion=CH |
C18 reversed phase column | Agilent Technologies | 685975-902 | Agilent Poroshell 120 SB-C18 (4.6 x 100 mm) |
Na2S2O8, sodium persulfate | Sigma Aldrich | 71890 | http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/product/sial/71890?lang=de®ion=CH |
BPCA standards | |||
trimellitic acid | Sigma Aldrich | 92119 | http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/product/fluka/92119?lang=de®ion=CH |
hemimellitic acid | Sigma Aldrich | 51520 | http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/product/aldrich/51520?lang=de®ion=CH |
pyromellitic acid | Sigma Aldrich | 83181 | http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/search?term=83181&interface=All&N=0&mode=match%20partialmax&lang=de®ion=CH&focus=product |
benzenepentacarboxylic acid | Sigma Aldrich | S437107 | http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/product/aldrich/s437107?lang=de®ion=CH |
mellitic acid | Sigma Aldrich | M2705 | http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/product/aldrich/m2705?lang=de®ion=CH |
oxidation standars | |||
phtalic acid | Sigma-Aldrich | 80010 | http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/product/sial/80010?lang=de®ion=CH |
sucrose | Sigma-Aldrich | S7903 | http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/product/sigma/s7903?lang=de®ion=CH |
black carbon reference materials | University of Zurich | N/A | http://www.geo.uzh.ch/en/units/physische-geographie-boden-biogeographie/services/black-carbon-reference-materials |