Arsenic Scavenging by Aluminum-Substituted Ferrihydrites in a Circumneutral pH River Impacted by Acid Mine Drainage.
Author(s) -
Areej Adra,
Guillaume Morin,
Georges Ona-Nguéma,
Nicolas Menguy,
Fabien Maillot,
Corinne Casiot,
Odile Bruneel,
S. Lebrun,
Farid Juillot,
Jessica Brest
Publication year - 2013
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/es4020234
Subject(s) - arsenic , extended x ray absorption fine structure , environmental chemistry , scavenging , acid mine drainage , ferrihydrite , chemistry , metalloid , schwertmannite , arsenate , arsenopyrite , pollutant , mineralogy , goethite , adsorption , metal , absorption spectroscopy , organic chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , antioxidant , chalcopyrite , copper
Ferrihydrite (Fh) is a nanocrystalline ferric oxyhydroxide involved in the retention of pollutants in natural systems and in water-treatment processes. The status and properties of major chemical impurities in natural Fh is however still scarcely documented. Here we investigated the structure of aluminum-rich Fh, and their role in arsenic scavenging in river-bed sediments from a circumneutral river (pH 6-7) impacted by an arsenic-rich acid mine drainage (AMD). Extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectroscopy at the Fe K-edge shows that Fh is the predominant mineral phase forming after neutralization of the AMD, in association with minor amount of schwertmannite transported from the AMD. TEM-EDXS elemental mapping and SEM-EDXS analyses combined with EXAFS analysis indicates that Al(3+) substitutes for Fe(3+) ions into the Fh structure in the natural sediment samples, with local aluminum concentration within the 25-30 ± 10 mol %Al range. Synthetic aluminous Fh prepared in the present study are found to be less Al-substituted (14-20 ± 5 mol %Al). Finally, EXAFS analysis at the arsenic K-edge indicates that As(V) form similar inner-sphere surface complexes on the natural and synthetic Al-substituted Fh studied. Our results provide direct evidence for the scavenging of arsenic by natural Al-Fh, which emphasize the possible implication of such material for scavenging pollutants in natural or engineered systems.
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