Interaction of Polar and Nonpolar Organic Pollutants with Soil Organic Matter: Sorption Experiments and Molecular Dynamics Simulation
Ashour A. Ahmed, S\"oren Thiele-Bruhn, Saadullah G. Aziz, Rifaat H., Hilal, Shaaban A. Elroby, Abdulrahman O. Al-Youbi, Peter Leinweber, Oliver, K\"uhn

TL;DR
This study combines sorption experiments and molecular dynamics simulations to understand how polar and nonpolar organic pollutants interact with soil organic matter at a molecular level, revealing the influence of SOM composition and cavities.
Contribution
It introduces a new SOM model and provides combined experimental and theoretical insights into pollutant-SOM interactions, highlighting the role of soil cavities and chemical composition.
Findings
Hydrophobic HCB adsorbs more strongly than polar SAA.
Sorption depends more on SOM composition than content.
HCB forms stable complexes with SOM models.
Abstract
The fate of organic pollutants in the environment is influenced by several factors including the type and strength of their interactions with soil components especially SOM. However, a molecular level answer to the question How organic pollutants interact with SOM? is lacking. In order to explore mechanisms of this interaction, we have developed a new SOM model followed by carrying out molecular dynamics (MD) simulations in parallel with sorption experiments. The new SOM model comprises free SOM functional groups (carboxylic acid and naphthalene) as well as SOM cavities (with two different sizes), representing the soil voids, containing the same SOM functional groups. To examine the effect of the hydrophobicity on the interaction, the organic pollutants hexachlorobenzene (HCB, non-polar) and sulfanilamide (SAA, polar) were considered. The experimental and the theoretical outcomes…
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