The misuse of permanganate as a quantitative measure of soil organic carbon

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Abstract

In the last two decades, permanganate has been used to define what is assumed to be a labile or “active” soil carbon (C) pool, commonly referred to as “permanganate-oxidizable carbon” (POXC). However, uncertainties in the reduction reaction (Mn7+ → Mn4+/Mn2+) and even greater uncertainties in the oxidation reaction (C? → C?) as well as the reaction of non-C reductants in the soil sample preclude the calculation of milligram C per kilogram of soil oxidized. Combined variation in the reduction–oxidation reactions can entail up to fivefold variation in how much soil organic C is oxidized per unit permanganate reduced. Without determining final reduction state of Mn and the initial and final oxidation states of C, the amount of C oxidized cannot be calculated. Unless a concrete understanding of the reduction and oxidation half-reactions is achieved, an alternative expression of permanganate reactivity of a soil sample (i.e., not mg C kg−1 soil) is needed.

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Margenot, A. J., Wade, J., & Woodings, F. S. (2024). The misuse of permanganate as a quantitative measure of soil organic carbon. Agricultural and Environmental Letters, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1002/ael2.20124

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