1996
DOI: 10.1021/es9506216
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Microbial Reduction of Crystalline Iron(III) Oxides:  Influence of Oxide Surface Area and Potential for Cell Growth

Abstract: Quantitative aspects of microbial crystalline iron(III) oxide reduction were examined using a dissimilatory iron(III) oxide-reducing bacterium (Shewanella alga strain BrY). The initial rate and long-term extent of reduction of a range of synthetic iron(III) oxides were linearly correlated with oxide surface area. Oxide reduction rates reached an asymptote at cell concentrations in excess of ≈1 × 109/m2 of oxide surface. Experiments with microbially reduced goethite that had been washed with pH 5 sodium acetate… Show more

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Cited by 714 publications
(648 citation statements)
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“…The results of the experiments shown in Figure 1A confirm the general linear dependence of initial bacterial Fe(III) oxide reduction rate on oxide surface area documented in previous experiments with a smaller suite of synthetic oxides (7). The consistent linear correlation between oxide reduction rate and surface area across a wide range of FeRB cell densities ( Figure 2A) indicates that limitations on reduction rate posed by reductant abundance were not responsible for linearization of an otherwise logarithmic rate vs surface area relationship.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 83%
“…The results of the experiments shown in Figure 1A confirm the general linear dependence of initial bacterial Fe(III) oxide reduction rate on oxide surface area documented in previous experiments with a smaller suite of synthetic oxides (7). The consistent linear correlation between oxide reduction rate and surface area across a wide range of FeRB cell densities ( Figure 2A) indicates that limitations on reduction rate posed by reductant abundance were not responsible for linearization of an otherwise logarithmic rate vs surface area relationship.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 83%
“…Although not well studied, natural crystalline Fe(III) oxides, including both goethite and hematite, appear more reducible than those synthesized in the laboratory (Roden and Zachara, 1996;Zachara et al, 1998). The reasons for this observation have not been confirmed but isomorphous substitution of Fe(III) by other metals (e.g., Al(III)), and larger crystallite disorder, surface roughness, and surface area of natural Fe(III) oxides may be important.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Amorphous and crystalline Fe(III) oxides are utilized as electron acceptors by dissimilatory Fe-reducing bacteria (DIRB) (Lovley and Phillips, 1986;Arnold et al, 1986;Roden and Zachara, 1996;Fredrickson et al, 1998;Zachara et al, 1998). S. alga and other facultative Shewanella strains can grow, albeit slowly, using ferrihydrite and goethite as sole electron acceptors (Roden and Zachara, 1996).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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