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1.
The effects of natural organic matter (NOM), ferrozine, and AQDS (anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate) on the reduction of hematite (alpha-Fe2O3) by Shewanella putrefaciens CN32 were studied. It has been proposed that NOM enhances the reduction of Fe(III) by means of electron shuttling or by Fe(II) complexation. Previously both mechanisms were studied separately using "functional analogues" (AQDS for electron shuttling and ferrozine for complexation) and are presently compared with seven different NOMs. AQDS enhanced hematite reduction within the first 24 h of incubation, and this had been ascribed to electron shuttling. Most of the NOMs enhanced hematite reduction after 1 day of incubation indicating that these materials could also serve as electron shuttles. The effect of ferrozine was linear with concentration, and all of the NOMs exhibited this behavior. Fe(II) complexation only enhanced hematite reduction after sufficient Fe(II) had accumulated in the system. Fe(II) complexation appeared to alleviate a suppression of the hematite reduction rate caused by accumulation of Fe(II) in the system. Addition of Fe(II) to the hematite suspension, prior to inoculation with CN32, significantly inhibited hematite reduction and greatly diminished the effects of all of the organic materials, although some enhancement was observed due to addition of anthroquinone-2,6-disulfonate. These results demonstrate that NOM can enhance iron reduction by electron shuttling and by complexation mechanisms.  相似文献   

2.
The reductive dissolution of hematite (alpha-Fe2O3) was investigated in a flow-through system using AH2DS, a reduced form of anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS), which is often used as a model electron shuttling compound in studies of dissimilatory microbial reduction of iron oxides. Influent flow rate, pH, and Fe(II) and phosphate concentrations were varied to investigate the redox kinetics in a flow-through reactor. The hematite reduction rates decreased with increasing pH from 4.5 to 7.6 and decreased with decreasing flow rate. The rates also decreased with increasing influent concentration of Fe(II) or phosphate that formed surface complexes at the experimental pH. Mineral surface properties, Fe(II) complexation reactions, and ADDS sorption on hematite surfaces were independently investigated for interpreting hematite reduction kinetics. AH2DS sorption to hematite was inferred from the parallel measurements of AQDS and AH2DS sorption to alpha-Al2O3, a redox stable analog of alpha-Fe2O3. Decreasing Fe(ll) and increasing AH2DS sorption by controlling flow rate, influent pH, and Fe(II) and phosphate concentrations increased the rates of reductive dissolution. The rates were also affected by the redox reaction free energy when reductive dissolution approached equilibrium. This study demonstrated the importance of the geochemical variables for the reductive dissolution kinetics of iron oxides.  相似文献   

3.
In this study, cyclic voltammetry was used to characterize the redox properties of natural organic matter (NOM). Using a stationary platinum working electrode, minimal concentrations of electrolyte, and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) as the solvent, we were able to resolve two pairs of oxidation and reduction peaks for a fraction of Georgetown NOM that is enriched in polyphenolic moieties (NOM-PP). Applying our method to other fractions of Georgetown NOM, and to samples of NOM from a wide range of other sources, gave cyclic voltammograms (CVs) that generally contained fewer distinguishing features than those obtained with NOM-PP. For comparison, CVs were also obtained using our method on six quinone model compounds: anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS), lawsone, juglone, menadione, menaquinone-4, and ubiquinone-5. The CVs of these quinones were similar in shape to the CV of NOM-PP, consistent with the notion that quinones are the dominant redox-active moieties associated with NOM. Quantitative analysis of the peaks in these CVs showed that the peak potentials (Ep) were separated by more than 0.059 V and that the peak currents (i(p)) were linearly related to the square root of the scan rate (v0.5) and concentration (C) for both NOM-PP and the model quinones. Equivalent results were obtained with a rotating Pt disk electrode. From this we conclude that NOM-PP and the model quinones undergo similar sequences of two one-electron, quasi-reversible, diffusion controlled, electron transfers at the Pt electrode surface in DMSO. Although it is difficult to relate these results to Nernstian standard potentials vs the standard hydrogen electrode (SHE) under aqueous conditions, it is clear that the apparent formal potential for NOM-PP lies between the corresponding potentials for menadione and juglone and well above that of AQDS. Attempts to derive correlations between Ep and i(p) for the NOMs with quantifiable electrode response and other measurable properties of NOM (including trace metal content and UV-vis absorbance) did not yield any strong relationships.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of zinc on the biological reduction of hematite (alpha-Fe2O3) by the dissimilatory metal-reducing bacterium (DMRB) Shewanella putrefaciens CN32 was studied in the presence of four natural organic materials (NOMs). Experiments were performed under non-growth conditions with H2 as the electron donor and zinc inhibition was quantified as the decrease in the 5 d extent of hematite bioreduction as compared to no-zinc controls. Every NOM was shown to significantly increase zinc inhibition during hematite bioreduction. NOMs were shown to alter the distribution of both biogenic Fe(II) and Zn(II) between partitioned (hematite and cell surfaces) and solution phases. To further evaluate the mechanism(s) of NOM-promoted zinc inhibition, similar bioreduction experiments were conducted with nitrate as a soluble electron acceptor, and hematite bioreduction experiments were conducted with manganese which was essentially non-inhibitory in the absence of NOM. The results suggest that Me(II)-NOM complexes may be specifically inhibitory during solid-phase bioreduction via interference of DMRB attachment to hematite through the formation of ternary Me(II)-NOM-hematite complexes.  相似文献   

5.
We collected M?ssbauer spectra of 57Fe(II) interacting with 56hematite (alpha-Fe2O3) over a range of Fe(II) concentrations and pH values to explore whether a sorbed Fe(II) species would form. Several models of Fe(II) sorption (e.g., surface complexation models) assume that stable, sorbed Fe(II) species form on ligand binding sites of Fe(III) oxides and other minerals. Model predictions of changes in both speciation and concentration of sorbed Fe(II) species are often invoked to explain Fe(II) sorption patterns, as well as rates of contaminant reduction and microbial respiration of Fe(III) oxides. Here we demonstrate that, at low Fe(II) concentrations, sorbed Fe(II) species are transient and quickly undergo interfacial electron transfer with structural Fe(III) in hematite. At higher Fe(II) concentrations, however, we observe the formation of a stable, sorbed Fe(II) phase on hematite that we believe to be the first spectroscopic confirmation for a sorbed Fe(II) phase forming on an iron oxide. Low-temperature M?ssbauer spectra suggest that the sorbed Fe(II) phase contains varying degrees of Fe(II)-Fe(II) interaction and likely contains a mixture of adsorbed Fe(II) species and surface precipitated Fe(OH)2(s). The transition from Fe(II)-Fe(III) interfacial electron transfer to formation of a stable, sorbed Fe(II) phase coincides with the macroscopically observed change in isotherm slope, as well as the estimated surface site saturation suggesting that the finite capacity for interfacial electron transfer is influenced by surface properties. The spectroscopic demonstration of two distinctly different sorption endpoints, that is an Fe(III) coating formed from electron transfer or a stable, sorbed Fe(II) phase, challenges us to reconsider our traditional interpretations and modeling of Fe(II) sorption behavior (as well as, we would argue, of any other redox active sorbate-sorbent couple).  相似文献   

6.
Superoxide (and potentially its conjugate acid hydroperoxyl) is unique among the reactive oxygen species in that its standard redox potential in circumneutral natural waters potentially allows it to reduce ferric iron to the more soluble ferrous state. Here we have observed the superoxide/ hydroperoxyl-mediated reduction of ferric complexes with a variety of synthetic organic ligands and several complexes with natural organic matter (NOM), as well as freshly precipitated amorphous ferric oxyhydroxide, in bicarbonate buffered solutions at pH 8.1. From measurements of superoxide decay in the presence of the complexes, we calculated second-order rate constants for superoxide/ hydroperoxyl-mediated reduction that vary from (9.3+/-0.2) x 10(3) M(-1) s(-1) for the complex between Fe(III) and desferrioxamine B up to (1.9+/-0.2) x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1) for Fe(III)-salicylate and (2.3+/-0.1) x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1) for one of the Fe(III)-NOM complexes. We also verified that ferrous iron was produced from superoxide/hydroperoxyl-mediated Fe(III) reduction using ferrozine to trap free Fe(II). Low yields of the ferrozine complex when compared to the measured rates of superoxide decay suggest that ferric complexes are reduced directlyto corresponding ferrous complexes, with much of the ferrous complex reoxidizing before it is able to release free ferrous iron. This is an important consideration for microorganisms, as the kinetics of trace metal uptake is typically governed by free ion activity.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The fate of Zn and other sorbed heavy metals during microbial reduction of iron oxides is different when comparing synthetic Fe-(hydr)oxides and natural sediments undergoing a similar degree of iron reduction. Batch experiments with the iron-reducing organism Shewanella putrefaciens were conducted to examine the effects of an aqueous complexant (nitrilotriacetic acid or NTA), two solid-phase complexants (kaolinite and montmorillonite), an electron carrier (anthraquinone disulfonic acid or AQDS), and a humic acid on the speciation of Zn during microbial reduction of synthetic goethite. Compared to systems containing only goethite and Zn, microbial Fe(III) reduction in the presence of clay resulted in up to a 50% reduction in Zn immobilization (insoluble in a 2 h 0.5 M HCl extraction) without affecting Fe(II) production. NTA (3 mM) increased Fe(II) production 2-fold and resulted in recovery of nearly 75% of Zn in the aqueous fraction. AQDS (50 microM) resulted in a 12.5% decrease in Fe(II) production and a 44% reduction in Zn immobilization. Humic acid additions resulted in up to a 25% decrease in Fe(II) production and 51% decrease in Zn immobilization. The results suggest that all the components examined here as either complexing agents or electron shuttles reduce the degree of Zn immobilization by limiting the availability of Zn for incorporation into newly formed biogenic minerals. These results have implications for the remediation of heavy metals in a variety of natural sediments.  相似文献   

9.
We investigated bioremediation of As-contaminated soils by reductive dissolution of As using a dissimilatory As(V)-reducing bacterium (DARB), Bacillus selenatarsenatis SF-1. We also examined the effect of anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS), an extracellular electron-shuttling quinone, on the As extraction. When B. selenatarsenatis was incubated with As(V)-laden Al precipitates, no acceleration of As dissolution was observed in the presence of AQDS, even though the microbial reduction of AQDS occurred actively. In contrast, AQDS addition significantly enhanced the reductive dissolution of As and Fe in analogous experiments with As(V)-laden Fe(III) precipitates, whereas As dissolution did not occur in the absence of the As(V) reducer. These results indicate the dissolution of As was accelerated by indirect reduction of solid-phase Fe(III) following microbial AQDS reduction, although As(V) reduction is vital for As extraction. B. selenatarsenatis was able to extract As from two types of industrially contaminated soils through reduction of solid-phase As(V) and Fe(III). The copresence of AQDS with B. selenatarsenatis improved the removal efficiency of As from the contaminated soils, concomitantly releasing Fe(II), suggesting that simultaneous use of DARB and electron-shuttling compounds can be an effective strategy for remediation of As-contaminated soils.  相似文献   

10.
Experiments were conducted to examine the role of humic acid and quinone model compounds in bromate reduction by Fe(0). The reactivity of Fe(0) toward bromate declined by a factor of 1.3-2.0 in the presence of humic acid. Evidence was obtained that the quick complexation of humic acid with iron species and its adsorption passivated the iron surface and decreased the rate of bromate reduction by Fe(0). On the other hand, in the long run, the reduced functional groups present in humic acid were observed to regenerate Fe(II) and reduce bromate abiotically. Compared with the case of humic acid only, the simultaneous presence of Fe(II) and humic acid significantly increased the bromate removal rate. Fe(III)/Fe(II) acted as a catalyst in the oxidation of humic acid by bromate. Anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS) and lawsone did not cause any significant effect on the bromate reduction rate by Fe(0). However, the redox reactivity of lawsone in the presence of Fe(III) was evident, while AQDS did not show any under the tested conditions. The difference was attributable to the presence/ absence of reducing functional groups in the model compounds. The electron spin resonance further demonstrated that the redox functional groups in humic acid are most likely quinone-phenol moieties. Although the bromate reduction rate by regenerated Fe(II) is a few times slower than that by Fe(0), the reactive Fe(II) can be, alternatively, reductively formed to maintain iron surface activation and bromate reduction to prolong the lifetime of the zerovalent iron.  相似文献   

11.
Microbial dissimilatory iron reduction (DIR) is an important pathway for carbon oxidation in anoxic sediments, and iron isotopes may distinguish between iron produced by DIR and other sources of aqueous Fe(II). Previous studies have shown that aqueous Fe(II) produced during the earliest stages of DIR has delta56Fe values that are 0.5-2.0%o lowerthan the initial Fe(III) substrate. The new experiments reported here suggest that this fractionation is controlled by coupled electron and Fe atom exchange between Fe(II) and Fe(III) at iron oxide surfaces. In hematite and goethite reduction experiments with Geobacter sulfurreducens, the 56Fe/54Fe isotopic fractionation between aqueous Fe(II) and the outermost layers of Fe(III) on the oxide surface is approximately -3%o and can be explained by equilibrium Fe isotope partitioning between reactive Fe(II) and Fe(III) pools that coexist during DIR. The results indicate that sorption of Fe(II) to Fe(III) substrates cannot account for production of low-delta56Fe values for aqueous Fe(II) during DIR.  相似文献   

12.
Batch studies were conducted to explore differences in the transformation pathways of 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT) reduction by a Gram-positive fermenting bacterium (Cellulomonas sp. strain ES6) in the presence and absence of ferrihydrite and the electron shuttle anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS). Strain ES6 was capable of TNT and ferrihydrite reduction with increased reduction rates in the presence of AQDS. Hydroxylaminodinitrotoluenes, 2,4-dihydroxylamino-6-nitrotoluene (2,4-DHANT), and tetranitroazoxytoluenes were the major metabolites observed in ferrihydrite- and AQDS-free systems in the presence of pure cell cultures. Ferrihydrite enhanced the production of amino derivatives because of reactions with microbially produced surface-associated Fe(ll). The presence of AQDS in the absence of ferrihydrite promoted the fast initial formation of arylhydroxylamines such as 2,4-DHANT. However, unlike in pure cell systems, these arylhydroxylamines were transformed into several unidentified polar products. When both microbially reduced ferrihydrite and AQDS were present simultaneously, the reduction of TNT was more rapid and complete via pathways thatwould have been difficult to infer solely from single component studies. This study demonstrates the complexity of TNT degradation patterns in model systems where the interactions among bacteria, Fe minerals, and organic matter have a pronounced effect on the degradation pathway of TNT.  相似文献   

13.
Electron transfer and atom exchange (ETAE) between aqueous Fe(II) and Fe(III) oxides induces surface growth and dissolution that affects trace element fate and transport. We have recently demonstrated Ni(II) cycling through goethite and hematite (adsorbed Ni incorporates into the mineral structure and preincorporated Ni releases to solution) during Fe(II)-Fe(III) ETAE. However, the chemical parameters affecting net trace element release remain unknown. Here, we examine the chemical controls on Ni(II) and Zn(II) release from Ni- and Zn-substituted goethite and hematite during reaction with Fe(II). Release follows a rate law consistent with surface reaction limited mineral dissolution and suggests that release occurs near sites of Fe(III) reductive dissolution during Fe(II)-Fe(III) ETAE. Metal substituent type affects reactivity; Zn release is more pronounced from hematite than goethite, whereas the opposite trend occurs for Ni. Buildup of Ni or Zn in solution inhibits further release but this resumes upon fluid exchange, suggesting that sustained release is possible under flow conditions. Mineral and aqueous Fe(II) concentrations as well as pH strongly affect sorbed Fe(II) concentrations, which directly control the reaction rates and final metal concentrations. Our results demonstrate that structurally incorporated trace elements are mobilized from iron oxides into fluids without abiotic or microbial net iron reduction. Such release may affect micronutrient availability, contaminant transport, and the distribution of redox-inactive trace elements in natural and engineered systems.  相似文献   

14.
Arsenic mobility in natural environments is controlled primarily by sorption onto metal oxide surfaces, and the extent of this sorption may be influenced strongly by the presence of other dissolved substances that interact with surfaces or with arsenic itself. Natural organic matter (NOM), a prevalent constituent of natural waters, is highly reactive toward both metals and surfaces and is thus a clear candidate to influence arsenic mobility. The objectives of this study were therefore to reveal the influences of diverse NOM samples on the sorption of arsenic onto hematite, a model metal oxide, as well as to reveal influences of arsenic on the sorption of NOM, using conditions and concentrations relevant to natural freshwater environments. Of the six NOM samples tested, four formed aqueous complexes with arsenate and arsenite. The extent of complexation varied with the NOM origin and, in particular, increased with the cationic metal (primarily Fe) content of the NOM sample. In addition, every NOM sample showed active redox behavior toward arsenic species, indicating that NOM may greatly influence redox as well as complexation speciation of arsenic in freshwater environments. When NOM and As were incubated together with hematite, NOM dramatically delayed the attainment of sorption equilibrium and diminished the extent of sorption of both arsenate and arsenite. Consistent with this result, when NOM and As were introduced sequentially, all NOM samples displaced sorbed arsenate and arsenite from hematite surfaces, and arsenic species similarly displaced sorbed NOM from hematite in significant quantities. Competition between NOM and As for sorption thus appears to be a potentially important process in natural waters, suggesting that NOM may play a greater role in arsenic mobility than previously recognized. In addition, in all sorption experiments, arsenite was consistently desorbed or prevented from sorbing to a greater extent than arsenate, indicating that interactions with NOM may also partially explain the generally greater mobility of arsenite in natural environments.  相似文献   

15.
Quinones are present in trace amounts in natural organic matter. The addition of thiol compounds to quinones produces reactive electron-transfer species that may be important for the transformation of chlorinated hydrocarbons under sulfate-reducing conditions. This study systematically investigated the transformation of carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) in homogeneous aqueous solutions containing quinones as electron-transfer mediators and thiol compounds as bulk reductants. The thiol compounds, including sodium hydrosulfide (NaHS) and cysteine, were found to effectively transform CCl4. The transformation of CCl4 followed pseudo-first-order kinetics, and the pseudo-first-order rate constants (kobs) were (3.24 +/- 0.46) x 10(-7) and 1.04 x 10(-7) s(-1), respectively, when solutions contained NaHS and cysteine alone. Addition of quinone compounds, including anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS), benzoquinone (BQ), juglone (JQ), naphthoquinone (NQ), lawsone (LQ), and menadione (MQ), increased the transformation rate and efficiency of CCl4. The kobs values for CCl4 transformation in the presence of quinones were 2.6-71 times higher than those for the thiol compounds alone. The enhancement efficiency followed the order JQ > NQ > BQ > AQDS > LQ > MQ. Spectroscopic studies indicated that the quinone compounds generated various active electron-transfer mediators to transfer electrons from the bulk reductants to CCl4. BQ and NQ produced mercaptoquinones as active redox mediators that significantly enhanced the transformation rate of CCl4 in the presence of NaHS. The addition of thiol reductants produced large amounts of AQDS semiquinone radical as the electron shuttle. In addition, MQ and LQ were reduced by NaHS to give hydroquinone, which slightly enhanced the transformation efficiency of CCl4. These results clearly indicate that the enhanced efficiency of quinones for the transformation of chlorinated hydrocarbons is specifically related to the produced reactive species. Mercaptoquinone is a more active mediator than either semiquinone or hydroquinone for transferring electrons in a reducing environment containing thiol reductants.  相似文献   

16.
Uptake of Fe(II) onto hematite (alpha-Fe2O3), corundum (alpha-Al2O3), amorphous ferric oxide (AFO), and a mixture of hematite and AFO was measured. Uptake was operationally divided into adsorption (extractable by 0.5 N HCl within 20 h) and fixation (extractable by 3.0 N HCl within 7 d). For 0.25 mM Fe(II) onto 25 mM iron(III) hematite at pH 6.8: (i) 10% of Fe(II) was adsorbed within 1 min; (ii) 20% of Fe(II) was adsorbed within 1 d; (iii) uptake slowly increased to 24% of Fe(II) during the next 24 d, almost all adsorbed; (iv) at 30 d, the uptake increased to 28% of Fe(II) with 6% of total Fe(II) fixed; and (v) uptake slowly increased to 30% of Fe(II) by 45 d with 10% of total Fe(II) fixed. Similar results were observed for 0.125 mM Fe(II) onto 25 mM iron(III) hematite, except that percent of adsorption and fixation were increased. There was adsorption but no fixation for 0.25 mM Fe(II) onto corundum [196.2 mM Al(III)] at pH 6.8, for 0.125 mM Fe(II) onto 25 mM iron(III) hematite at pH 4.5, and for 0.25 mM Zn(II) onto 25 mM iron(III) hematite at pH 6.8. A small addition of AFO to the hematite suspension increased Fe(II) fixation when 0.25 mM Fe(II) was reacted with 25 mM iron(III) hematite and 0.025 mM Fe(III) AFO at pH 6.8. Reaction of 0.125 mM Fe(II) with 2.5 mM Fe(III) AFO resulted in rapid adsorption of 30% of added Fe(II), followed by conversion of AFO to goethite and a decrease in adsorption without Fe(II) fixation. The fixation of Fe(II) by hematite at pH 6.8 is consistent with interfacial electron transfer and the formation of new mineral phases. We propose that electron transfer from adsorbed Fe(II) to structural Fe(III) in hematite results in oxidation of Fe(II) to AFO on the surface of hematite and that solid-phase contact among hematite, AFO, and structural Fe(II) produces magnetite (Fe3O4). The unique interactions of Fe(II) with iron(III) oxides would be environmentally important to understand the fate of redox-sensitive chemicals.  相似文献   

17.
Bacterial dissimilatory iron reduction is self-inhibited by the production of ferrous [Fe(II)] iron resulting in diminished iron reduction as Fe(II) accumulates. Experiments were conducted to investigate the mechanisms of Fe(II) inhibition employing the dissimilatory metal-reducing bacterium Shewanella putrefaciens strain CN32 under nongrowth conditions in a system designed to minimize precipitation of ferrous iron minerals. After an initial period (ca. 1 day) of relatively rapid iron reduction, hematite reduction rates were controlled by mass transfer of Fe(II). Experiments in which hematite was equilibrated with Mn(II) prior to inoculation indicated that the observed inhibition was not due to Fe(II) sorption. At longer times, soluble Fe(II) accumulated such that the reaction was slowed due to a decreased thermodynamic driving force. The thermodynamic evaluation also supported the prior conclusion that hydrated hematite surface sites may yield substantially more energy during bioreduction than "bulk" hematite. For well-mixed conditions, the rates of hematite reduction were directly proportional to the biologically available reaction potential.  相似文献   

18.
At least 93% of Fe(II) remained free, as defined by ferrozine assay under anoxic conditions in the presence of humic acid (HA) and two simulated landfill leachates of different maturities. However, tangential flow ultrafiltration showed a weaker but more extensive interaction of Fe with organic carbon (OC); 90% of Fe associated with the less mature leachate. Despite the existence of this weak interaction under anoxic conditions, there was no difference in iron(III) (hydr)oxide production whether HA was added prior to or coincident with the oxidation of Fe(II) on exposure to oxic conditions. Under oxic conditions ferrozine showed that more Fe(II) bound to OC, up to 50% to HA. However, this occurs via oxidation of Fe(II) to Fe(III), which is bound and then thermally reduced. This affinity for Fe(III) and the ability to carry out thermal reduction both increase with the maturity of the OC. The rate at which ferrozine-defined free Fe(II) was lost on exposure to dissolved oxygen was also enhanced by the more mature OC, while it was slowed by acetogenic leachate. The slowing must be a consequence of the filtration-defined Fe(II)/OC interaction.  相似文献   

19.
Natural organic matter (NOM)-mediated redox cycling of elemental mercury Hg(0) and mercuric Hg(II) is critically important in affecting inorganic mercury transformation and bioavailability. However, these processes are not well understood, particularly in anoxic water and sediments where NOM can be reduced and toxic methylmercury is formed. We show that under dark anoxic conditions reduced organic matter (NOM(re)) simultaneously reduces and oxidizes Hg via different reaction mechanisms. Reduction of Hg(II) is primarily caused by reduced quinones. However, Hg(0) oxidation is controlled by thiol functional groups via oxidative complexation, which is demonstrated by the oxidation of Hg(0) by low-molecular-weight thiol compounds, glutathione, and mercaptoacetic acid, under reducing conditions. Depending on the NOM source, oxidation state, and NOM:Hg ratio, NOM reduces Hg(II) at initial rates ranging from 0.4 to 5.5 h(-1), which are about 2 to 6 times higher than those observed for photochemical reduction of Hg(II) in open surface waters. However, rapid reduction of Hg(II) by NOM(re) can be offset by oxidation of Hg(0) with an estimated initial rate as high as 5.4 h(-1). This dual role of NOM(re) is expected to strongly influence the availability of reactive Hg and thus to have important implications for microbial uptake and methylation in anoxic environments.  相似文献   

20.
Natural Organic Matter (NOM) is a major sorbent for organic pollutants in soils and sediments. While sorption under oxic conditions has been well investigated, possible changes in the sorption capacity of a given NOM induced by reduction have not yet been studied. Reduction of quinones to hydroquinones, the major redox active moieties in NOM, increases the number of H-donor moieties and thus may affect sorption. This work compares the sorption of four nonionic organic pollutants of different polarities (naphthalene, acetophenone, quinoline, and 2-naphthol), and of the organocation paraquat to unreduced and electrochemically reduced Leonardite Humic Acid (LHA). The redox states of reduced and unreduced LHA in all sorption experiments were stable, as demonstrated by a spectrophotometric 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol reduction assay. The sorption isotherms of the nonionic pollutants were highly linear, while paraquat sorption was strongly concentration dependent. LHA reduction did not result in significant changes in the sorption of all tested compounds, not even of the cationic paraquat at pH 7, 9, and 11. This work provides the first evidence that changes in NOM redox state do not largely affect organic pollutant sorption, suggesting that current sorption models are applicable both to unreduced and to reduced soil and sediment NOM.  相似文献   

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