Background
Although humic substances are the principal ingredients in processed humic products, there has been no practical way to determine if a material is humified, allowing fake products to be used by farmers instead of genuine humic substances.
Conclusion
This method can differentiate humic from non-humic substances in materials intended to be used as ingredients in commercial humic products or for research. Highlights: This method uses common laboratory procedures and equipment.
Objective
To develop a test method using conventional laboratory techniques to determine if a material is humified. Method: A neutralized extract is prepared using the standardized extraction protocols specified in ISO 19822:2018(E). A portion of the extract is used to determine the concentration of dissolved organic matter on an ash-free basis. A portion of the remaining neutralized extract is diluted to a concentration of 30 mg/kg of dissolved organic matter and transferred to a quartz UV cuvette for ultraviolet-visible (UV-Vis) spectroscopy. UV-Vis absorbance is recorded over a wavelength range of 220-500 nm at 5 nm intervals. The absorbance data are normalized by conversion to scaled absorbance, which is compared to a reference scaled absorbance spectral curve for humic substances to determine if the tested material is humic or non-humic.
Results
This method was able to differentiate legitimate humic substances from non-humic adulterants in a multiple-laboratory validation study (P ≤ 0.05).
