Laboratory Identification Methods: Biochemical Humic Acid vs Weathered Coal-derived Humic Acid
The core laboratory methods to distinguish biochemical humic acid (fermented/plant-sourced) and weathered coal-derived humic acid (mineral-sourced) rely on analyzing elemental composition, spectral characteristics, structural fragments, radiocarbon content, ash content and impurities to establish unique fingerprint differences.
1. Preliminary Screening: Appearance & Basic Physicochemical Properties
- Color & Water solubilityWeathered coal-derived: Black or dark brown; dissolves into deep brown solution.Biochemical sourced: Yellow or light brown; dissolves into bright yellow or orange-red solution.
- OdorWeathered coal-derived: Odorless or with faint coal smell.Biochemical sourced: Fermented sour aroma or wine lees odor.
- Ash content (calcination method)Weathered coal-derived: High ash content (20%-50%).Biochemical sourced: Low ash content (<10%).
- pH valueWeathered coal-derived: Neutral to weakly alkaline.Biochemical sourced: Acidic (pH 3-5).
2. Elemental Analysis (C/H/O/N/S & Ash Test)
Test via elemental analyzer and calcination method:
| Index | Weathered Coal-derived Humic Acid | Biochemical Humic Acid |
| Carbon (%) | 50-65% (High) | 40-50% (Low) |
| H/C Ratio | < 1.0 (High aromaticity) | > 1.2 (More aliphatic chains) |
| O/C Ratio | 0.5-0.7 | 0.7-1.0 (More hydroxyl & polysaccharide groups) |
| Nitrogen (%) | 0.5-2% | 3-6% (Rich in protein & amino acids) |
| Ash Content | 20%-50% | < 10% |
Judgment Criteria:H/C <1.0, high carbon and low nitrogen = mineral source (weathered coal);H/C >1.2, low carbon, high nitrogen and low ash = biochemical source.
3. UV-Visible Spectroscopy (UV-Vis)
Measure absorbance at 250/365/465 nm and calculate E4/E6 & E2/E3 ratios.
- Weathered coal-derived: E4/E6 = 3.0-4.5; high aromatic condensation and large molecular weight.
- Biochemical sourced: E4/E6 = 5.0-7.0; low aromaticity and small molecular weight.
Judgment Criteria:E4/E6 <4.5 = mineral source; E4/E6 >5.0 = biochemical source.
4. FTIR Spectroscopy (Core Structural Fingerprint)
- Weathered coal-derived humic acidWeak or no peak at 1720 cm⁻¹ (low carboxylic acid content);Strong peak at 1600 cm⁻¹ (aromatic skeleton);Strong absorption at 1380-1400 cm⁻¹; weak peak at 1050-1100 cm⁻¹ (low polysaccharide content).
- Biochemical humic acidStrong peak at 1720 cm⁻¹ (rich in carboxylic acid and ester groups);Medium-weak peak at 1600 cm⁻¹ (low aromatic content);Intense peak at 1050-1100 cm⁻¹ (polysaccharide characteristic);Visible peak at 1540 cm⁻¹ (amide from protein).
Judgment Criteria:Strong 1600 peak + weak 1720 & 1050 peaks = weathered coal source;Strong 1720 & 1050 peaks + 1540 characteristic peak = biochemical source.
5. Fluorescence Spectroscopy (Rapid Identification)
- Weathered coal-derived: Excitation 420-470 nm / Emission 500-530 nm (red-shifted long wavelength).
- Biochemical sourced: Excitation 300-350 nm / Emission 420-470 nm (blue-shifted short wavelength).
6. Solid-state ¹³C NMR (Gold Standard for Structure Analysis)
- Weathered coal-derived: Aromatic carbon (100-160 ppm): 50%-70% (main component); low aliphatic carbon content.
- Biochemical sourced: Aliphatic & oxygenated aliphatic carbon: 60%-80% (polysaccharide & cellulose); aromatic carbon <30%.
7. Radiocarbon Test (Most Authoritative Method)
- Weathered coal-derived: Almost no ¹⁴C activity (ancient fossil carbon).
- Biochemical sourced: ¹⁴C activity consistent with modern atmospheric level (contemporary plant/fermented carbon).
How to Distinguish Biochemical Humic Acid from Weathered Coal Humic Acid by Spectral Characteristics
1. UV-Visible Spectroscopy (UV–Vis) & E4/E6 Ratio (Most Common Quick Test)
- Weathered coal-derived humic acid
- Higher aromatic condensation degree, large molecular weight
- E4/E6 ratio: 0 – 4.5 (low value)
- Solution color: dark brown / blackish brown, strong light absorption in long wavelength
- Biochemical humic acid
- Low aromaticity, small molecular weight, rich in aliphatic chains & polysaccharides
- E4/E6 ratio: 0 – 7.0 (high value)
- Solution color: yellow / orange-red
Judgment rule:E4/E6 < 4.5 → weathered coal sourceE4/E6 > 5.0 → biochemical source
2. FTIR Infrared Spectroscopy (Structural Fingerprint Identification)
Weathered coal humic acid characteristic peaks
- 1600 cm⁻¹: Very strong absorption (aromatic ring skeleton dominant)
- 1720 cm⁻¹: Weak or almost absent (few carboxylic acid groups)
- 1050–1100 cm⁻¹: Weak peak (low polysaccharide content)
Biochemical humic acid characteristic peaks
- 1720 cm⁻¹: Strong peak (abundant carboxyl & ester groups)
- 1600 cm⁻¹: Medium or weak peak (low aromatic structure)
- 1050–1100 cm⁻¹: Extremely strong peak (rich polysaccharide C–O structure)
- 1540 cm⁻¹: Obvious absorption peak (protein amide characteristic)
3. Fluorescence Spectroscopy
- Weathered coal source:Excitation 420–470 nm / Emission 500–530 nm (red-shifted long wavelength)
- Biochemical source:Excitation 300–350 nm / Emission 420–470 nm (blue-shifted short wavelength)
4. Solid-state ¹³C NMR Spectrum
- Weathered coal: Aromatic carbon (100–160 ppm) accounts for 50%–70%
- Biochemical type: Aliphatic & oxygenated aliphatic carbon dominant; aromatic carbon less than 30%
Lab Testing Method process
SOP: Spectral Identification of Biochemical Humic Acid & Weathered Coal-derived Humic Acid
1 Sample Pretreatment
- Dry the sample at a constant temperature of 45 °C until constant weight is achieved.
- Crush the dried sample and sieve through a 100-mesh screen.
- Purification procedure:
- Dissolve the powder with 0.1 mol/L NaOH solution.
- Allow standing, then centrifuge and collect the supernatant.
- Acidify with hydrochloric acid to precipitate crude humic acid.
- Centrifuge to collect the precipitate and wash with pure water until neutral pH.
- Dry at low temperature to obtain purified humic acid for testing.
2 UV‑Vis Spectroscopy Test Procedure
- Accurately weigh the purified sample and prepare a dilute homogeneous solution with weak NaOH solvent.
- Use blank alkaline solution for baseline calibration of the spectrophotometer.
- Perform full-wavelength scanning from 200 nm to 700 nm.
- Record absorbance values at 465 nm and 665 nm, then calculate the E4/E6 ratio.
Judgment Standard
- E4/E6 = 3.0–4.5: Weathered coal-derived humic acid
- E4/E6 = 5.0–7.0: Biochemical humic acid
3 FTIR Spectroscopy Test Procedure (KBr Pellet Method)
- Fully dry KBr powder and test sample; mix at a mass ratio of 100:1 and grind finely.
- Press the mixture into a transparent pellet with a professional mold.
- Scan the full infrared range from 4000 cm⁻¹ to 400 cm⁻¹.
Spectrum Identification Criteria
- Weathered coal-derived humic acid: Strong absorption at 1600 cm⁻¹; weak peaks at 1720 cm⁻¹ and 1050 cm⁻¹.
- Biochemical humic acid: Strong peaks at 1720 cm⁻¹ and 1050 cm⁻¹; obvious characteristic peak at 1540 cm⁻¹.
4 Fluorescence Spectroscopy Test Procedure
- Dilute the sample solution to an appropriate low concentration.
- Instrument setting: Excitation wavelength 300–480 nm; Emission wavelength 400–550 nm.
- Observe the maximum fluorescence peak position:
- Maximum peak Ex>420 nm: Weathered coal-derived humic acid
- Maximum peak Ex<360 nm: Biochemical humic acid
5 Solid-state ¹³C NMR Confirmation Procedure
- Completely dry the purified sample to remove moisture.
- Load the sample into a rotor and conduct NMR testing.
- Integrate and calculate the proportion of carbon structures:
- Aromatic carbon content ≥ 50%: Weathered coal-derived humic acid
- Aromatic carbon content < 30% (aliphatic & polysaccharide carbon dominant): Biochemical humic acid