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Electrochemical Analysis of Changes in Iron Oxide Reducibility during Abiotic Ferrihydrite Transformation into Goethite and Magnetite
Author(s) -
Meret Aeppli,
Rälf Kaegi,
Ruben Kretzschmar,
Andreas Voegelin,
Thomas B. Hofstetter,
Michael Sander
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
environmental science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.851
H-Index - 397
eISSN - 1520-5851
pISSN - 0013-936X
DOI - 10.1021/acs.est.8b07190
Subject(s) - ferrihydrite , goethite , magnetite , iron oxide , lepidocrocite , ferrous , oxide , chemistry , inorganic chemistry , hematite , hydrous ferric oxides , electrochemistry , materials science , mineralogy , metallurgy , electrode , sorption , organic chemistry , adsorption
Electron transfer to ferric iron in (oxyhydr-)oxides (hereafter iron oxides) is a critical step in many processes that are central to the biogeochemical cycling of elements and to pollutant dynamics. Understanding these processes requires analytical approaches that allow for characterizing the reactivity of iron oxides toward reduction under controlled thermodynamic boundary conditions. Here, we used mediated electrochemical reduction (MER) to follow changes in iron oxide reduction extents and rates during abiotic ferrous iron-induced transformation of six-line ferrihydrite. Transformation experiments (10 mM ferrihydrite-Fe III ) were conducted over a range of solution conditions (pH rans = 6.50 to 7.50 at 5 mM Fe 2+ and for pH rans = 7.00 also at 1 mM Fe 2+ ) that resulted in the transformation of ferrihydrite into thermodynamically more stable goethite or magnetite. The changes in iron oxide mineralogy during the transformations were quantified using X-ray diffraction analysis. MER measurements on iron oxide suspension aliquots collected during the transformations were performed over a range of pH MER at constant applied reduction potential. The extents and rates of iron oxide reduction in MER decreased with decreasing reaction driving force resulting from both increasing pH MER and increasing transformation of ferrihydrite into thermodynamically more stable iron oxides. We show that the decreases in iron oxide reduction extents and rates during ferrihydrite transformations can be linked to the concurrent changes in iron oxide mineralogy.

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