The pH-dependent adsorption of U(VI) onto three heterogeneous, subsurface media from the Department of Energy (DOE) Oak Ridge Reservation, Savannah River Site, and Hanford Reservation was investigated. The three materials contained significant quantities of iron and manganese oxides with nearly identical extractable iron oxide contents (25.3-25.8 g/kg). A model independently developed for the adsorption of U(VI) to synthetic ferrihydrite (Waite, T. D.; Davis, J. A.; Payne, T. E.; Waychunas, G. A.; Xu, N. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 1994, 58, 5465-5478) was able to predict the major features of the pH-dependent U(VI) adsorption to the materials under the assumption that all the dithionite-citrate-bicarbonate extractable iron oxide was present as ferrihydrite. Further experiments with the Oak Ridge soil as a function of carbonate and U(VI) concentration indicated that the model could predict pH-dependent U(VI) adsorption to within a root mean square error of 0.163-0.408, even under conditions outside of those for which the model was developed. These results indicate that this model could be used as a first approximation in predicting U(VI) adsorption and transport in the subsurface. U(VI) adsorption also decreased at pH >10, even in the absence of carbonate, which is of potential importance to U(VI) mobility in extreme environments present in the subsurface at some DOE facilities. The pH-dependent adsorption of U(VI) was fundamentally different in systems with a constant CO2 partial pressure as compared to a constant total carbonate concentration. Experiments at constant CO2 partial pressure may not be representative of the conditions present in the subsurface, and a constant carbonate concentration does not always result in decreased U(VI) adsorption at higher pH values.
Uranium(VI) adsorption and transport in three natural, heterogeneous subsurface media were investigated in batch and column experiments. The rate of U(VI) adsorption to the natural samples was rapid over the first few hours of the experiments, and then slowed appreciably after 24 to 48 h. The adsorption of U(VI) to the samples was also nonlinear, suggesting a decreasing attraction for the surface with increased surface loading. The extent of adsorption on each of the media was strongly pH‐dependent, increasing sharply as the pH increased from 4.5 to 5.5 and then decreasing sharply over the pH range 7.5 to 8.5 as the concentration of dissolved carbonate and U(VI)–carbonate complexes increased. The similarities in the pH‐dependent behavior between the three materials despite differences in bulk mineralogy was likely due to the similar Fe contents of the materials. The transport of U(VI) through packed columns of the soils and sediments was significantly retarded but reversible. The local equilibrium assumption and the batch‐measured adsorption isotherms dramatically underestimated the degree of retardation observed in the columns. The U(VI) displacement experiments were modeled with the one‐dimensional advective–dispersive equation and several different model formulations describing the interactions of U(VI) with the solid phase. These models were able to fit the observed breakthrough curves within 0.1 root mean square error of the initial concentration.
Analysis of mercury-contaminated soil from the flood plain of East Fork Poplar Creek (EFPC) in Oak Ridge, TN, using a scanning electron microscope (SEM) with energy-and wavelength X-ray dispersive spectroscopy (EDS/WDS) and a transmission electron microscope (TEM) with select area electron diffraction (SAED) revealed the presence of submicron, crystalline mercuric sulfide (HgS) in the form of metacinnabar. The HgS formed in place after the deposition and burial of mercury-contaminated soils. A reaction path model developed to describe the geochemical evolution of the soil redox conditions during flooding predicted that the resultant pe and pH of the soil would be within the stability range of HgS. The reaction of mercury with other metal sulfides or sulfhydryl groups in the soil may have also contributed to the formation of HgS. The formation of HgS is significant to the remediation efforts at EFPC because the toxicity, leachability, and volatility of mercury in soils is dependent on the solid phase speciation. Because the local hydrogeochemical conditions are not unique, the formation of HgS at this site has implications to other environments as well.
Abiotic reduction of 0.1 mM U(VI) by Fe(II) in the presence of synthetic iron oxides (biogenic magnetite, goethite, and hematite) and natural Fe(III) oxide-containing solids was investigated in pH 6.8 artificial groundwater containing 10 mM NaHCO3. In most experiments, more than 95% of added U(VI) was sorbed to solids. U(VI) was rapidly and extensively (> or = 80%) reduced in the presence of synthetic Fe(III) oxides and highly Fe(II) oxide-enriched (18-35 wt % Fe) Atlantic coastal plain sediments. In contrast, long-term (20-60 d) U(VI) reduction was less than 30% in suspensions of six other natural solids with relatively low Fe(III) oxide content (1-5 wt % Fe). Fe(II) sorption site density was severalfold lower on these natural solids (0.2-1.1 Fe(II) nm(-2)) compared tothe synthetic Fe(lII) oxides (1.6-3.2 Fe(II) nm(-2)), which may explain the poor U(VI) reduction in the natural solid-containing systems. Addition of the reduced form of the electron shuttling compound anthrahydroquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AH2DS; final concentration 2.5 mM) to the natural solid suspensions enhanced the rate and extent of U(VI) reduction, suggesting that AH2DS reduced U(VI) at surface sites where reaction of U(VI) with sorbed Fe(II) was limited. This study demonstrates that abiotic, Fe(II)-driven U(VI) reduction is likely to be less efficient in natural soils and sediments than would be inferred from studies with synthetic Fe(III) oxides.
The influence of various soil physical and chemical properties (Fe and Mn oxides, pH, cation exchange capacity, total inorganic and organic carbon, and particle size) on As(V) adsorption, sequestration, and relative bioaccessibility (as a surrogate for oral bioavailability) was investigated in a wide range of well-characterized soils over a 6-month period. Arsenic(V) bioaccessibility was measured using a streamlined version of a physiologically based extracton test (PBET), designed to replicate the solubility-limiting conditions in a child's digestive tract. The soil's dithionite-citrate-bicarbonate (DCB) extractable Fe oxide content was the most important land only statistically significant) soil property controlling the initial degree of adsorption. Sequestration, as measured by the reduction in bioaccessibility over time, occurred to a significant extent in 17 of 36 (47.2%) soils over the first 3 months. In contrast, only 4 of 36 (11.1%) soils exhibited a significant reduction in bioaccessibility from 3 to 6 months. Soil pH was the most important (and only statistically significant) soil property affecting the decrease in bioaccessibility upon aging for 6 months. Soils with pH < 6 generally sequestered As(V) more strongly over time, whereas those with pH > 6 generally did not. The Fe oxide content and pH were the most important soil properties governing the steady-state bioaccessibility of As(V) in soil. Two multivariable linear regression models of steady-state As(V) bioaccessibility were developed using soil properties as independent variables. Generally, soils having higher Fe oxide content and lower soil pH exhibited lower bioaccessibility. These models were able to account for approximately 75-80% of the variability in steady-state bioaccessibility and independently predict bioaccessibility in five soils within a root-mean-square error (RMSE) of 8.2-10.9%. One of these models was also able to predict within an RMSE of 9.5% the in vivo bioavailability of As in nine contaminated soils previously used in swine dosing trials. These results indicate the bioaccessibility, and thus, potentially the bioavailability of otherwise soluble As(V) added to soils (i.e., the worst-case bioavailability scenario) is significantly reduced in some soils over time, particularly those with lower pH and higher Fe oxide content. These results also provide a means of estimating As(V) bioaccessibility and bioavailability on the basis of soil properties.
Zero-valent iron nanoparticles (INP) were synthesized and stabilized using poly acrylic acid (PAA) to yield stabilized INP (S-INP). A two-dimensional physical model was used to study the fate and transport of the INP and S-INP in porous media under saturated, steady-state flow conditions. Transport data for a nonreactive tracer, INP, and S-INP were collected under similar flow conditions. The results show that unstabilized INP cannot be transported into groundwater systems. On the other hand, the S-INP can be transported like a tracer without significant retardation. However, the S-INP plume migrated downward as it moved horizontally in the physical model, indicating that small density gradients have significant influence on two-dimensional transport. The variable-density groundwater flow model SEAWAT was used to model the observed density-driven transport patterns. This is the first time a two-dimensional transport data set is reported for demonstrating the multidimensional transport characteristics of nanoparticles. The data shows the importance of density effects, which cannot be fully discerned using one-dimensional, column experiments. Finally, we also demonstrate that the numerical model SEAWAT can be used to predict the density-driven transport characteristics of S-INP in groundwater aquifers.
U(VI)-phosphate interactions are important in governing the subsurface mobility of U(VI) in both natural and contaminated environments. We studied U(VI) adsorption on goethite-coated sand (to mimic natural Fe-coated subsurface materials) as a function of pH in systems closed to the atmosphere, in both the presence and the absence of phosphate. Our results indicate that phosphate strongly affects U(VI) adsorption. The effect of phosphate on U(VI) adsorption was dependent on solution pH. At low pH, the adsorption of U(VI) increased in the presence of phosphate, and higher phosphate concentration caused a larger extent of increase in U(VI) adsorption. Phosphate was strongly bound by the goethite surface in the low pH range, and the increased adsorption of U(VI) at low pH was attributed to the formation of ternary surface complexes involving both U(VI) and phosphate. In the high pH range, the adsorption of U(VI) decreased in the presence of phosphate at low total Fe concentration, and higher phosphate concentration caused a larger extent of decrease in U(VI) adsorption. This decrease in U(VI) adsorption was attributed to the formation of soluble uranium-phosphate complexes. A surface complexation model (SCM) was proposed to describe the effect of phosphate on U(VI) adsorption to goethite. This proposed model was based on previous models that predict U(VI) adsorption to iron oxides in the absence of phosphate and previous models developed to predict phosphate adsorption on goethite. A postulated ternary surface complex of the form of (>FePO4UO2) was included in our model to account for the interactions between U(VI) and phosphate. The model we established can successfully predict U(VI) adsorption in the presence of phosphate under a range of conditions (i.e., pH, total phosphate concentration, and total Fe concentration).
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