Sulfate Availability Drives Divergent Evolution of Arsenic Speciation during Microbially Mediated Reductive Transformation of Schwertmannite

Edward D. Burton*, Scott G. Johnston, Peter Kraal, Richard T. Bush, Salirian Claff

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

The effect of SO42- availability on the microbially mediated reductive transformation of As(V)-coprecipitated schwertmannite (Fe8O8(OH)(3.2)(SO4)(2.4)(AsO4)(0.004)) was examined in long-term (up to 400 days) incubation experiments. Iron EXAFS spectroscopy showed siderite (FeCO3) and mackinawite (FeS) were the dominant secondary Fe(II) minerals produced via reductive schwertmannite transformation. In addition, similar to 25% to similar to 65% of the initial schwertmannite was also transformed relatively rapidly to goethite (alpha FeOOH), with the extent of this transformation being dependent on SO42- concentrations. More specifically, the presence of high SO42- concentrations acted to stabilize schwertmannite, retarding its transformation to goethite and allowing its partial persistence over the 400 day experiment duration. Elevated SO42- also decreased the extent of dissimilatory reduction of Fe(III) and As(V), instead favoring dissimilatory SO42- reduction. In contrast, where SO42- was less available, there was near-complete reduction of schwertmannite and goethite-derived Fe(III) as well as solid-phase As(V). As a result, under low SO42- conditions, almost no Fe(III) or As(V) remained toward the end of the experiment and arsenic solid-phase partitioning was controlled mainly by sorptive interactions between As(III) and mackinawite. These As(III)-mackinawite interactions led to the formation of an orpiment (As2S3)-like species. Interestingly, this orpiment-like arsenic species did not form under SO42--rich conditions, despite the prevalence of dissimilatory SO42- reduction. The absence of an arsenic sulfide species under SO42--rich conditions appears to have been a consequence of schwertmannite persistence, combined with the preferential retention of arsenic oxyanions by schwertmannite. The results highlight the critical role that SO42- availability can play in controlling solid-phase arsenic speciation, particularly arsenic-sulfur interactions, under reducing conditions in soils, sediments, and shallow groundwater systems.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2221-2229
Number of pages9
JournalEnvironmental Science and Technology
Volume47
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Mar 2013

Funding

Research expenses were provided by the Australian Research Council (grant DP110100519). Salary support for Scott Johnston was provided by the Australian Research Council (grant]FT110100130). The arsenic XAS components were conducted at the Australian National Beam line Facility (Tsukuba, Japan) with support from the Australian Synchrotron organisation (grant AS112/XAS3855) and the Australian Research Council (grant LE110100174). We thank Dr. Jade Aitken for her technical assistance and expert advice with the arsenic XAS data collection. The iron and sulfur XAS components were made possible by support from the National Synchrotron Radiation Research Centre (NSRRC) in Taiwan (grant 2011-2-002-1). We thank Dr. J.-.F Lee and Dr. L.-Y. Jang of the NSRRC for providing collaborative assistance and advice with collection of the iron and sulfur XAS data, respectively.

Keywords

  • ACID-MINE DRAINAGE
  • IRON-RICH
  • SORPTION
  • MACKINAWITE
  • GOETHITE
  • WETLAND
  • SULFUR
  • SOIL
  • MOBILIZATION
  • SOLUBILITY

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