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99Tc(VII) Retardation, Reduction, and Redox Rate Scaling in Naturally Reduced Sediments Yuanyuan Liu, Chongxuan Liu, Ravi Kukkadapu, James McKinley, John M. Zachara, Andrew Plymale, Micah D. Miller, Tamas Varga, and Charles T. Resch Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b03273 • Publication Date (Web): 15 Oct 2015 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on October 18, 2015
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Yuanyuan Liu, Chongxuan Liu*, Ravi K. Kukkadapu, James P. McKinley, John Zachara, Andrew E. Plymale, Micah D. Miller, Tamas Varga, Charles T. Resch
Tc(VII) Retardation, Reduction, and Redox Rate Scaling in Naturally Reduced Sediments
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Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, WA 99354
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Submitted to Environmental Science and Technology
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Corresponding author, Chongxuan Liu, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, K8-96,
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Richland, WA 99354, (509)371-6350, Fax(509)371-6354; email:
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[email protected] 22 1 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Abstract: An experimental and modeling study was conducted to investigate pertechnetate
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(Tc(VII)O4-) retardation, reduction, and rate scaling in three sediments from Ringold formation
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at U.S. Department of Energy’s Hanford site, where 99Tc is a major contaminant in groundwater.
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Tc(VII) was reduced in all the sediments in both batch reactors and diffusion columns, with a
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faster rate in a sediment containing a higher concentration of HCl-extractable Fe(II). Tc(VII)
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migration in the diffusion columns was reductively retarded with retardation degrees correlated
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with Tc(VII) reduction rates. The reduction rates were faster in the diffusion columns than those
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in the batch reactors, apparently influenced by the spatial distribution of redox-reactive minerals
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along transport paths that supplied Tc(VII). X-ray computed tomography and autoradiography
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were performed to identify the spatial locations of Tc(VII) reduction and transport paths in the
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sediments, and results generally confirmed the newly found behavior of reaction rate changes
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from batch to column. The results from this study implied that Tc(VII) migration can be
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reductively retarded at Hanford site with a retardation degree dependent on reactive Fe(II)
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content and its distribution in sediments. This study also demonstrated that an effective reaction
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rate may be faster in transport systems than that in well-mixed reactors.
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INTRODUCTION
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Technetium-99 (99Tc) is a groundwater contaminant with a long radioactive decay half-
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life (2.13 × 105 years).1 It exists as pertechnetate (TcO4-) in oxic environments.2, 3 Under anoxic
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conditions, TcO4- can be reduced through both biotic4-14 and abiotic reaction pathways,15-20
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forming sparingly soluble Tc(IV)O2·nH2O,3, 21 and other poorly crystalized Tc(IV) phases.4, 20, 22-
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24
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often dominate Tc(VII) reduction rates.20 Fe(II) is an important reductant for the abiotic Tc(VII)
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reduction.16, 26 Tc(VII) can be reduced by various Fe(II) species including aqueous Fe(II),17
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sorbed Fe(II),16, 26 , amorphous Fe(II) gel,27 Fe(II)-containing minerals such as green rust,23
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magnetite,27-30 pyrite,30, 31siderite,16, 18, 27 vivianite,27 FeS,32-34 FeO,32 and Fe(II)-bearing granite35
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and phyllosilicates such as montmorillonite, nontronite, rectorite, illite, chlorite, palygorskite.15,
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26, 27, 36
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37, 38
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reduction.16 A kinetic model that integrates the contribution of multiple Fe(II) species is critically
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needed for describing Tc(VII) reduction in sediments.
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While biotic and abiotic reaction pathways can coexist in sediments,19, 25 the abiotic pathways
The rates of Tc(VII) reduction, however, vary with the form of Fe(II) species.16, 17, 20, 25, 26,
Different Fe(II) species can co-exist in sediments that may collectively affect Tc(VII)
Tc(VII) reduction is commonly investigated under well-mixed conditions. Limited
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studies implied that Tc(VII) reduction may have contributed to the retardation of Tc(VII)
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migration in granite,35, 39 bentonite,40 and deep fracture zone.41 Models to describe Tc(VII)
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reductive migration have not been well studied. Little is known about the impact of transport on
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the rate of Tc(VII) reduction and the scaling behavior of the reduction rate from well-mixed to
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transport systems. Geochemical reaction rates can be affected by heterogeneous mineral
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distribution in transport systems.42-49 Effective reaction rates may decrease in orders of
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magnitude from well-mixed to heterogeneous systems.50-57 The decrease in reaction rate,
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however, depends on specific geochemical reactions, pore structure and connectivity, and 3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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statistical distributions of reactants and their spatial and temporal correlations. Reactive transport
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studies with microscopic insights are thus needed to understand the Tc(VII) reduction in reactive
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transport systems and scaling behavior of Tc(VII) reduction rate from well-mixed to transport
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system.
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The objectives of this study are to: 1) investigate 99Tc(VII) retardation in natural
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sediments containing multiple Fe(II) species, 2) develop reactive transport models to describe
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Tc(VII) reductive migration in the sediments, and 3) evaluate the scaling behavior of Tc(VII)
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reduction rates from well-mixed to transport systems. The sediments were collected from the
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Ringold formation at US Department of Energy’s Hanford site where over 400 Ci of 99Tc has
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been released from radionuclide waste tanks to the vadoze zone at the site (The geology of
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Hanford site and 99Tc plume profile are provided in SI).16 Currently, the released 99Tc has
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migrated through the vadoze zone in the Hanford formation.58-60 The Ringold sediments locate
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below the Hanford formation and contain multiple Fe(II)-containing minerals that can potentially
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retard Tc migration.16 Batch and diffusion experiments were performed to measure Tc(VII)
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reduction and retardation, effective kinetic and reactive transport models were evaluated to
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simulate Tc(VII) reductive migration in the sediments, and the experimental and model results
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were used to assess the effect of transport on the effective rate of Tc(VII) reduction. Mössbauer
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spectroscopy, x-ray computed tomography (XCT), autoradiography and scanning electron
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microscopy (SEM), as well as tracer Br diffusion were performed to provide physical and
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chemical insights into the Tc(VII) reduction and retardation in the sediments.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Sediments and Characterization. Sediments used in this study were collected from a 55 m deep borehole (borehole C6209) at depth of 30.8-31.1 m, 39.0-39.3 m and 51.5-51.8 m in the 4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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uncontaminated Ringold formation at the downstream of 99Tc plume at Hanford Site.61 These
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sediments have different grain size distribution and Fe(II)-content, and were named as sediment
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A, B and C, respectively hereafter. The collected sediments were stored at -80 oC, and thaw
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before usage in an anaerobic chamber filled with N2 at room temperature. All experiments were
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conducted in the anaerobic chamber. The sediments were dried at room temperature to measure
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moisture content, and then wet-sieved through 2, 0.5 and 0.053 mm meshes to determine the
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grain size distribution.62 Fe(II) content and mineralogy in the sediments was determined by acid-
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extraction (0.5 M HCl) and Mössbauer spectroscopy following the methods described
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elsewhere.26, 63 The details of these methods were provided in supporting information (SI). The
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Fe(II) contents in the sediments were used as the initial Fe(II) concentrations for both the batch
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and column experiments.
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Tc(VII) Reduction In Batch Reactors. Sediments were mixed with 100 mL Hanford
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synthetic groundwater (SGW)47 containing 10 µM TcO4- in 150 mL serum bottles.
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Sediment/SGW ratio was varied for different sediments (18-63 g soil/1 L water) with a smaller
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sediment/SGW ratio for the sediment containing more HCl-extractable Fe(II). The pH of the
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SGW was stable (8.6 ± 0.1) during the entire experiments. The sediment suspensions were mixed
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on a shaker at 200 rpm. Periodically, the suspensions were collected and filtered (0.2 µm mixed
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cellulose ester, MCE, syringe filters), and 0.5 mL filtrate was added to 10 mL Opti-Fluor
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cocktail (Perkin-Elmer) to quantify Tc(VII) concentration on a Packard 2500TR Scintillation
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Counter.16 A parallel set of experiments using ground sediments (i.e., the sediments were ground
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with a agate mortar until passing through 0.5 mm mesh) were also performed and compared with
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experiments using the pristine sediments to investigate potential Fe(II) reactivity associated with
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large particles. Ground sediments were used previously to investigate Tc(VII) reduction in
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sediments.16
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At the end of the experiments, the residual sediment in the suspension was collected by
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filtration. The collected sediment (1 g) was mixed with 4 mL DI water for 1 h and then filtered,
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and Tc in the filtrate was determined. This part of Tc was assumed to be Tc(VII) in the residual
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sediment.16, 64 The total Tc(IV+VII) concentration in the residual sediment was determined using
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a strong acid-extraction method (provided in SI) modified from previous studies.65, 66 The
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insoluble Tc(IV) in the residual sediment was calculated by the difference between total
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Tc(IV+VII) and Tc(VII) concentrations determined from the strong acid and DI-water extraction
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methods.
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Tc Retardation Experiments. Tc retardation in the sediments was assessed using
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diffusion columns (10 cm long × 2.5 cm inner diameter). The diffusion columns instead of
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traditional flow-through systems were used to minimize producing large amount of high
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radioactive wastes. The sediments in the field-collected intact cores (10 cm diameter) were
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extracted using a soil collection tube (2.5 cm inner diameter). Five replicates were extracted from
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each intact sediment core, and were immediately transferred to the diffusion columns in the
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anaerobic chamber for the retardation experiments. The two ends of the columns were equipped
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with 0.45 µm MCE membranes supported by stainless steel meshes (Fig. SI1). The sediments in
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the diffusion columns were first saturated with SGW. The porosity (θ) in the columns was
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calculated as the moisture content in the sediments plus the weight difference before and after
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water saturation in the columns. The SGW-saturated columns were submerged in 1.5 L SGW
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containing ~10 µM TcO4- and ~33 mg/L Br- in a 2.7 L Flip-Tite storage tank (Fig. SI1). The bulk
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solution in the tank was continuously mixed with a magnetic stir bar. Aqueous solution samples
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(2.4 mL) were periodically collected and filtered to monitor the concentrations of Tc(VII) and
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Br– (ion chromatography, Dionex ICS-2500). Occasionally, the bulk solution was sampled, and
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Tc(VII) and Tc(IV) in the samples were separated by adding tetraphenyl arsonium chloride
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(TPAC), a reagent that selectively forms a complex with Tc(VII), and the formed
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Tc(VII)−TPAC complex was extracted using chloroform. The Tc in the remaining solution and
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Tc in the chloroform were determined as Tc(IV) and Tc(VII), respectively. The extraction
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procedure was described elsewhere14, 20 and provided in SI. Tc(IV) was not detected throughout
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the experiment in the bulk solution.
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After 1, 2, 4, and 8 weeks of diffusion, one column for each sediment was retrieved from
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each bulk solution tank, and the sediment in the column was sectioned to measure the diffusion
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profiles of dissolved Tc(VII) and Br-, and total Tc(IV+VII) concentrations. To section the
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sediment, the column was frozen at -35 oC in an anaerobic freezer overnight. The frozen
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sediments were pushed out and sectioned into 10 to 12 increments along column longitudinal
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direction. The dissolved Tc(VII) and Br- in the sediment increments were extracted using DI
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water (SI). Independent measurements and calculations of Tc(VII) sorption to the sediments in
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the batch reactors indicated that sorbed Tc(VII) was negligible, and DI-extracted Tc was
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dissolved Tc(VII) in the pore water. The total Tc(IV+VII) concentration in the sediment
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increments was determined using the strong acid-extraction method. The concentrations of HCl-
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extractable Fe(II) in the sediments were also measured after 1 and 8 weeks of Tc diffusion and
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reduction using the Ferrozine method. All the extraction methods were the same as described
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before.
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After 8 weeks’ diffusion, the sediments in the columns were scanned using XCT (Xtek XT H 320) at voxel resolution of 28 µm.67 Then, the columns were sectioned into five 2-cm
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increments and embedded in epoxy resin (PELCO 24-Hour Epoxy Mount Kit). The epoxy-
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embedded sediments were then cut with a diamond saw (TED PELLA) and the surfaces of the
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cross section were polished and used for digital autoradiography68 and SEM scanning (JEOL
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6340 field emission SEM with backscattered electron (BSE) detector). The SEM images were
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used as the reference to superimpose the autoradiography images over the XCT images (Fig. SI2)
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using Adobe Photoshop to determine residual Tc distribution and its correlation with the
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distribution of pores/grains in the sediment (Fig. SI2D and Fig. 1E). The details of XCT and
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digital autoradiography analysis were provided in SI. Multi-Rate Reaction Model. The reduction of TcO4- by sediment-associated Fe(II) is
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generally described using the following reaction:25, 36 TcO4- + 3Fe(II)−sediment → TcO2·nH2O(s) + 3Fe(III)−sediment
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1)
The rate of Tc(VII) reduction may be described using a 2nd order rate expression:28
r=
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∂CTc (VII ) ∂t
N
i = −∑ piα i C Fe ( II ) CTc (VII ) i =1
2)
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i where αi and C Fe ( II ) are the rate constant and reactive Fe(II) concentration at rate site i; CTc(VII) is
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the aqueous concentration of TcO4-, pi is the fraction of rate site with rate constant αi, and N is
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the number of rate sites. Modeling effort as described in the result section indicated that a single
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rate model (i.e., N =1 and pi = 1 in Eq 2) was not able to describe Tc(VII) reduction in the
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sediments. Consequently the multi-rate reaction model (Eq 2)51, 69 was adopted in this study to
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account for the potential roles of multiple Fe(II)-minerals in the sediments for reducing Tc(VII).
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To minimize the number of fitting parameters, the rate constants αi (i = 1, 2, … , N) were
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assumed to follow a lognormal probability distribution.69
p(α ) =
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1 (ln α − µ ) exp − 2 2π ασ 2σ 1
3)
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where p(α) is the probability density function of a rate site which has a corresponding rate
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constant of α; parameters µ and σ are the mean and deviation defining the probability function.
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Once µ and σ are known, the rate constants can be calculated from the probability function (Eq
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The initial reactive Fe(II) concentration at each reduction site was assumed to be
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proportional to the site density (pi in Eq 2). HCl-extractable Fe(II) was used as the initial reactive
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Fe(II) concentration, which was later adjusted to match experimental results.
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Reductive Diffusion Model. A dual domain diffusion model in linking with Tc(VII) reduction was used to describe Tc(VII) migration in the diffusion columns:69
∂C jf 184
∂t
=
i= N ∂C jf θ s ∂ Df − ω C jf − C sj + ∑ν ji ri f ∂x ∂x θ f i =1
(
s i=N ∂ ∂C j = Ds + ω C jf − C sj + ∑ν ji ris ∂t ∂x ∂x i =1
∂C sj 185
186
)
V
(
∂C jf = 2n Aθ f D f ∂t ∂x
∂C bj
x =0 + Aθ s Ds
)
∂C sj x =0
∂x
4)
5)
6)
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where the superscript and subscript “f”, “s” and “b” denotes the fast diffusion domain, slow
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diffusion domain and bulk solution, respectively, V (m3) is the volume of the bulk solution, A
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(m2) is the area of the column cross section, D (m2/h) is the effective diffusion coefficient, θ is the
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porosity, ω (h-1) is mass transfer coefficient between the fast and slow diffusion domains, vji is
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the stoichiometric coefficient of chemical component j in Tc(VII) reduction reaction at rate site i
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(ri, Eq 1), n is the number of columns in contact with the same bulk solution, and number 2
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before n in Eq 6 accounts for diffusion from two ends of each column. Aqueous species (Br- and
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TcO4-) and solid species (sediment-associated Fe(II) and TcO2·nH2O(s)) were considered in the
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modeling. By ignoring the reaction term, the model can be used to describe Br- diffusion. By
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setting θs to zero and ignoring equation 5, the dual-domain model becomes a single-domain
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model. Modeling results, however, found that the single-domain diffusion model failed to
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simultaneously describe the measured Br- concentration profiles obtained at different times for
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each sediment (Fig. SI3). Consequently, a dual domain model was adopted here to describe Br
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diffusion in the columns.
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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Sediment Properties. Grain size distribution and Fe(II) mineralogy vary among the three
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sediments used in the experiments (Table 1 and Fig. SI4). All the sediments are, however,
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dominated by C>B, and silt/clay size fraction is in the reverse order. The mineralogy in
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sediments A and C is dominated by quartz, cristobalite, and feldspar, with minor Fe(II)-
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containing minerals including siderite, magnetite, Fe(II)-pyroxene, and Fe(II)-phyllosilicates.
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Sediment A also contains trace amount of pyrite. The mineralogy of sediment B is dominated by
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quartz and feldspar, with minor magnetite and Fe(II)-phyllosilicates. All the Fe(II)-containing
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minerals in the sediments can potentially reduce Tc(VII).17, 38, 70 The amount of HCl-extractable
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Fe(II) follows the decreasing order of sediment A>C>B, showing that a sediment with more finer
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grain materials contains less HCl-extractable Fe(II) in the sediments.
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Tc(VII) Reduction in Well-mixed Reactors. Tc(VII) concentrations slowly decreased
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with time in all the sediment suspensions (Fig. 2A-C, circles). Extraction analysis of the
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sediments after batch experiments using DI water and strong acid extraction indicated that >97%
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of solid phase Tc existed as sparingly soluble Tc(IV). The reduction rate was relatively faster
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initially and decreased with time in all the sediments, and was faster in the sediment containing a
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higher HCl-extractable Fe(II) (sediment A>C>B). Sediment grinding enhanced Tc(VII)
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reduction in the first 2 to 3 days, indicating that the fresh surface areas created by grinding the
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large particles (>0.5mm) were more reactive to Tc(VII) reduction. After 2 to 3 days, however,
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the reduction rates slowed in all the sediments and were in approximately parallel to those 10 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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without grinding, indicating that the new reactive surface area generated by the grinding was
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small. The faster rate in the ground sediments was consistent with the previous observations
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using the ground materials.16
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Tc(VII) Reduction in Diffusion Columns. In this study, the diffusion profiles of Br
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and Tc in the left half and right half of the columns were treated as replicates. Figure 3 showed
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their averaged concentrations and variations as a function of distance from the bulk solution
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toward the column center. Tc(VII) diffusion profiles (Fig. 3A2-C2) were steeper than tracer Br-
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profiles (Fig. 3A1-C1), indicating Tc(VII) diffusion was retarded in all the sediments. The
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retardation was stronger in the sediment with a faster reaction rate (A>C>B). The total
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Tc(IV+VII) concentrations (Fig. 3A3-C3) had relatively steeper diffusion profiles as compared
232
to Tc(VII) as a result of local Tc(VII) reduction and Tc(IV) accumulation along diffusion paths.
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Locations near the bulk solution had higher Tc(VII) concentrations and longer duration of
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Tc(VII) contact with sediment-associated Fe(II), leading to higher Tc(IV) concentrations, and
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steeper total Tc(IV+VII) concentration profile. The total Tc concentrations had larger variations
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as compared to the dissolved Tc(VII) profiles, apparently caused by the heterogeneity of the
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sediment redox properties that affected local Tc(VII) reduction rate and Tc(IV) accumulation
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along the diffusion paths. Most of the Tc along the diffusion paths was associated with the solid
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phase, given that the highest possible concentration of Tc(VII) in the pore water (i.e., 10 µM)
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was equivalent to only 0.002-0.003 µmol/g after normalizing to sediment mass. The total Tc
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concentrations in the sediments were much lower than the HCl-extractable Fe(II) concentrations.
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As a result, the HCl-extractable Fe(II) concentration profiles had no detectable change during 8
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weeks of experimental duration (Fig. 3D3). The Tc(VII) diffusion and reduction in the sediments
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led to the decrease in Tc(VII) concentration in the bulk solutions (Fig. 3D2). Compared with Br-
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concentration, the decrease in Tc(VII) concentration in the bulk solution was much faster as a
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result of faster diffusion into the columns forced by the steeper concentration gradient at the bulk
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solution side (Fig. 3A2-C2). As expected, Tc(VII) concentrations in the bulk solution decreased
248
more quickly for the sediment with a faster Tc(VII) reduction rate (A>C>B).
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Modeling. The batch results (Fig. 2) were used to estimate rate constants in Eq 2 for
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Tc(VII) reduction by the sediments. The Br- data (Fig. 3A1-D1) were used to determine physical
251
transport parameters in the columns. These parameters were used in the reactive diffusion model
252
(Eq 4-6) to predict Tc(VII) reductive diffusion in the columns. The measured column data (Fig.
253
3A2-D2 and Fig. 3A3-C3) were used to evaluate the model prediction and rate changes from the
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well-mixed to diffusion systems.
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The Tc(VII) reduction in the batch reactors was well described using the multi-rate model
256
(Fig. 2A-C) with fitted rate parameters (µ and σ) provided in Table 1. A single rate model,
257
which assumes that each sediment contains only one reactive Fe(II) mineral or site, was tried and
258
found not able to simultaneously describe Tc(VII) reduction in all three sediments (Fig. SI5).
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The multi-rate model was then adopted by considering that the sediments contain multiple
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reactive sites contributed from different Fe(II)-containing minerals (Table 1). The multi-rate
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model did not distinguish whether the reactive sites were contributed from different surfaces on
262
individual minerals or from different Fe(II)-containing minerals. The total reactive Fe(II)
263
concentration (ܥி(ூூ) ), which was initially assumed to be the HCl-extractable Fe(II) (Table 1),
264
was adjusted to match the Tc(VII) reduction profile for each sediment. The fitted reactive Fe(II)
265
concentrations were 0.20, 0.03, and 0.09 µmol/g for sediment A, B, and C, respectively, which
266
were much smaller than the HCl-extractable Fe(II) in the sediments. The result indicated that
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most HCl-extractable Fe(II) was not reactive toward Tc(VII) reduction. However, the fitted
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reactive Fe(II) concentration was positively correlated with the HCl-extractable Fe(II)
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concentration in the sediments (i.e., sediment A>C>B). Using the estimated rate parameters (µ
270
and σ), the second-order rate constants were calculated using Eq 3. The rate constants calculated
271
using the estimated rate parameters (µ and σ, Eq 3) had a wide distribution (Fig. SI5, A3−C3),
272
with a mean of 6.5×10-4, 5.1×10-4, and 6.8×10-5 µM-1·h-1 for sediment A, B, and C, respectively.
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Tc(VII) reduction not only depended on rate constant, but also Fe(II) concentration (Eq 2). The
274
much higher Fe(II) concentration in sediment C led to a higher effective Tc(VII) reduction rate
275
in sediment C than that in sediment B.
276
The smaller rate constants in the rate constant distribution profiles (Fig. SI5) are not
277
reliable because these rate sites did not have time to contribute to Tc(VII) reduction during the
278
batch experiment duration. A previous statistical analysis indicated that only larger rate constants
279
can be reliably estimated.71 Grinding sediments consistently shifted those larger rate constants
280
toward right (Fig. SI5) and resulted in a higher mean of rate constants (8.5×10-3, 2.9×10-3, and
281
1.2×10-3 µM-1·h-1 for sediment A, B, and C, respectively).
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XCT results (Fig. 1D) revealed that the sediment in each column had a complex pore
283
structure. Some pores are well connected and others are not, suggesting that a dual or multiple
284
domain diffusion model is needed to fully describe the tracer transport. The dual-domain
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diffusion model, which considers a fast domain to represent transport in well-connected pores
286
and a slow domain to represent transport in not well-connected pores,48, 50, 72 provided a good
287
description of the experimental results of Br- diffusion (Fig. 3A1-D1). The estimated values of Df
288
in the fast diffusion domain (Table 1) were comparable to the reported apparent diffusion
289
coefficients in soils with similar water content: 2.3-6.5×10-6 m2·h-1 at θ = 0.41-0.56.73 The fitted
290
diffusion coefficient in the slow diffusion domain was comparable to matrix diffusion coefficient
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in soils and sediments: 1.1×10-8 m2·h-1.72 These parameters in the dual diffusion domain model
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were used to predict Tc(VII) reductive diffusion transport in the columns.
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Predicting Tc(VII) Reductive Diffusion. The results simulated using the reductive
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diffusion model with the rate parameters independently determined from the batch reactors and
295
physical transport parameters from Br- diffusion profiles generally matched with the
296
experimental results of Tc(VII) profiles in the columns (Fig. 3A2-D2, and Fig.3A3-C3). The
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minor variation in diffusion profiles with time was attributed to large Fe(II) availability relative
298
to Tc(VII) in the diffusion columns, leading to a quasi-steady-state of Tc(VII) supply and
299
reduction at the local scale. Discrepancy, however, existed. In the bulk solutions, Tc(VII)
300
concentrations were slightly over-predicted for all three sediments. In the pore water, Tc(VII)
301
concentrations matched well with the experimental results for sediments A and B for the first 4
302
weeks, but were slightly over-predicted at the 8th week. For sediment C, Tc(VII) concentrations
303
were over-predicted at all the time. The discrepancy between the predicted and measured total
304
Tc(IV+VII) was not obvious due to the large data variability as discussed before. The over-
305
prediction of Tc(VII) concentrations in both the bulk solution and pore water indicated that the
306
rate of Tc(VII) reduction in the columns was under-predicted, and was faster than that estimated
307
from the batch reactors. Using sediment C as an example, the multi-rate reaction parameters µ
308
and σ were refitted to match the Tc(VII) concentrations in the bulk solution and in the pore water
309
(Fig. SI6). The fitted rate constants were larger than those estimated from the well-mixed batch
310
reactor (Fig. SI6D); and the mean of the fitted rate constants was three times larger than that
311
estimated from well-mixed system (2.3×10-4 vs. 6.8×10-5 µM-1·h-1). The larger rate constants
312
estimated from the transport system is contradictory to the general trend of rate constant changes
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313
in other rate scaling observations,51-54, 74 where the reaction rates in columns were smaller than in
314
batch reactors due to the pore-scale mass transfer effect.
315
A recent study,44 however, established the following mathematical relationship that links
316
the rate constants derived from the well-mixed to those in the transport systems after modified
317
for Tc(VII) reduction case (SI Eq 1-7):
318
α ieff = α iins 1 +
i ′ CT O − ′ CFe ( II ) 1 + c 4 i CFe ( II ) CTcO4−
7)
319
where αieff and α iins are the effective rate constant in transport and well-mixed systems,
320
respectively , Ci is the pore scale concentrations of reactive Fe(II) and Tc(VII), overhead bars
321
represent average operation over a certain volume of porous media in the transport system, and C’
322
denotes the relative deviation of the pore-scale concentration from their average value. Eq 7
323
indicated that if pore scale concentrations of reactive Fe(II) and Tc(VII) were positively
324
correlated, the effective rate in the transport system can be larger than that estimated from the
325
batch reactor. The results from Tc(VII) reactive transport in sediment C apparently reflected this
326
scenario, likely resulting from the preferential association of reactive Fe(II) with the faster
327
diffusion paths so that the rate constants became larger in the column systems.
328
Microscopic Insights: XCT and autoradiography images were superimposed to identify
329
the spatial correlation between Tc(VII) reduction locations and well-connected pore paths in
330
sediments to provide insights into the rate scaling behavior as discussed above (Fig. 1E and F).
331
Overlapping XCT and autoradiography images found that Tc, showing as bright spots, was
332
accumulated at the locations where coarse/medium sand (~0.5 mm) and well-connected pores
333
concurrently existed (red squares). These accumulated Tc was attributed to Tc(IV) as a result of
334
local Tc(VII) reduction by sediment-associated Fe(II), and consequently was indicative of
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335
reactive Fe(II) locations. Little Tc was detected at the locations where silt/clay co-existed with
336
well-connected pores (Fig. SI7, blue circles) and where coarse sand coexisted with poor-
337
connected pores (Fig. SI7, green circles). Eq 7 indicates that the positive concurrent existence of
338
reactive Fe(II) and well-connected pores will lead to a larger effective rate constant in the
339
columns than that in the well-mixed reactors (Fig. SI6D). Most current studies focused on the
340
effect of transport property distribution on the scaling of reaction rates.44, 49, 75 The result here
341
demonstrated that the correlation of physical transport properties with reactive mineral
342
distributions is more important than the physical distribution only for controlling rate scaling
343
behavior.
344
Environmental Implications. TcO4- is highly mobile in groundwater that poses a long-
345
term health risk to human and ecological lives. Reduction of Tc(VII) to sparingly soluble
346
TcO2.nH2O has been proposed as a technique to remediate, contain, or retard Tc dispersion in
347
subsurface environments.14, 17, 18, 20, 32, 38, 76, 77 This type of techniques typically relied on the
348
injection of chemical reductants or stimulation of microbial activities to enzymatically reduce
349
Tc13, 14, 17, 32 or indirectly reduce Tc by biogenic Fe(II).18, 20 This study demonstrated that 99Tc
350
migration can be reductively retarded by the natural Fe(II)-containing sediments. Although the
351
reactive Fe(II) amount may be much lower than the total Fe(II) in the sediments (Table 1), the
352
vast amount of geological materials can provide a large capacity of reactive Fe(II) retarding Tc
353
migration. As an example, the Tc plume at Hanford site was estimated to be 16 km from the
354
Columbia River with a cross section of 10,000 m2.78 Ignoring dispersion, the reactive Fe(II) on
355
the path of the plume to Columbia River was estimated to be 9 × 105 – 6 × 106 kg based on the
356
estimated reactive Fe(II) content in the three sediments (Table 1). This amount of reactive Fe(II)
357
can treat 5 × 105 – 3 × 106 kg of Tc, which is equivalent to 9 × 106 – 6 × 107 Ci of 99Tc. Using
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358
the averaged Fe(II) concentration and rate constants, the Damköhler number ( Da = kCFe0 ( II )τ ) was
359
estimated to be 7.4×104 – 1.6×106 in the Ringold formation. The large Damköhler number and a
360
large capacity of reactive Fe(II) implied that Tc will be strongly retarded once entering into the
361
geological formation.
362
This study also revealed that the effective rate constants of Tc reduction may be larger
363
than those estimated from the batch reactor. The large rate in the sediments would enhance the
364
retardation of Tc migration. Most current studies indicated that reaction rate constants would
365
decrease with increasing scale.50-57 The result in this study implied that effective rate or rate
366
constants may increase or decrease with scale depending on the correlation between reactive
367
sites or hot spots and preferential transport paths.
368
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
369
This research is supported by the U.S. DOE, Office of Science, Biological and Environmental
370
Research (BER) as part of the Subsurface Biogeochemical Research (SBR) Program through
371
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) SBR Science Focus Area (SFA) Research
372
Project. Mössbauer spectroscopy, XCT, Autoradiography and SEM were performed using
373
facilities of the Environmental Molecular Science Laboratory (EMSL), a DOE Office of Science
374
user facility. We also thank the anonymous reviewers for their careful reading and constructive
375
comments.
376
Supporting Information. Additional method details, schematic experimental setup, Mössbauer
377
spectra, single domain and single rate modeling results, dual domain model fitting results, and
378
mathematical calculation for rate scaling theory. This information is available free of charge via
379
the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org/ . 17 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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380
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65. Zhao, Y.; Guo, Z.; Xu, J., 99TcO4− diffusion and sorption in compacted GMZ bentonite studied by capillary method. J. Radioanal. Nucl. Chem. 2013, 298, (1), 147-152. 66. Abdelouas, A.; Grambow, B.; Fattahi, M.; Andres, Y.; Leclerc-Cessac, E., Microbial reduction of 99Tc in organic matter-rich soils. Sci. Total Environ. 2005, 336, (1-3), 255-268. 67. Yang, X.; Liu, C.; Shang, J.; Fang, Y.; Bailey, V. L., A unified multiscale model for pore-scale flow simulations in soils. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 2014, 78, (1), 108-118. 68. McKinley, J. P.; Zachara, J. M.; Smith, S. C.; Liu, C., Cation exchange reactions controlling desorption of 90Sr2+ from coarse-grained contaminated sediments at the Hanford site, Washington. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 2007, 71, (2), 305-325. 69. Liu, C.; Zachara, J. M.; Qafoku, N. P.; Wang, Z., Scale-dependent desorption of uranium from contaminated subsurface sediments. Water Resour. Res. 2008, 44, (8), W08413. 70. DeLaune, R.; Reddy, K., Redox potential. Encyclopedia of Soils in the Environment 2005, 3, 366-371. 71. Zhang, X.; Liu, C.; Hu, B. X.; Zhang, G., Uncertainty analysis of multi-rate kinetics of uranium desorption from sediments. J. Contam. Hydrol. 2014, 156, 1-15. 72. Hay, M. B.; Stoliker, D. L.; Davis, J. A.; Zachara, J. M., Characterization of the intragranular water regime within subsurface sediments: Pore volume, surface area, and mass transfer limitations. Water Resour. Res. 2011, 47, (10), W10531. 73. Shackelford, C. D.; Daniel, D. E., Diffusion in saturated soil. I: Background. J. Geotech. Eng. 1991, 117, (3), 467-484. 74. White, A. F.; Brantley, S. L., The effect of time on the weathering of silicate minerals: why do weathering rates differ in the laboratory and field? Chem. Geol. 2003, 202, (3), 479-506. 75. Liu, Y.; Liu, C.; Zhang, C.; Yang, X.; Zachara, J. M., Pore and continuum scale study of the effect of subgrid transport heterogeneity on redox reaction rates. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 2015, 163, (0), 140-155. 76. Blowes, D. W.; Ptacek, C. J.; Benner, S. G.; McRae, C. W. T.; Bennett, T. A.; Puls, R. W., Treatment of inorganic contaminants using permeable reactive barriers. J. Contam. Hydrol. 2000, 45, (1-2), 123-137. 77. Cui, D. Q.; Eriksen, T., Reactive transport of Sr, Cs and Tc through a column packed with fracture-filling material. Radiochim. Acta 1998, 82, 287-292. 78. Freedman, V. L.; Williams, M. D.; Cole, C. R.; White, M. D.; Bergeron, M. P. 2002 initial assessments for B–BX-BY field investigation report (FIR): Numerical simulations; Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), Richland, WA (US): 2002.
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Table 1. Properties of the sediments, parameters for the multi-rate reduction kinetic model, column porosities, and parameters for the reactive transport model. 30.8-31.1 m 39.0-39.3 m 51.5-51.8 m a Prodominant Mineralogy Q, Cri, F Q, F Q, Cri, F, Cal, H, M S; M; S; M; Pyr Fe(II); Pyro Fe(II) & Fe(III); M; Iron phases b Pyro Fe(II) & Fe(III); PS Fe(II) & Fe(III); PS Fe(II) & Fe(III) G, M(t+o), I, H and PS Fe(II) & Fe(III) sp-oxide Fe(III) Fe(II)HCl (µmol/g) c 287.8 ± 22.3 52.6 ± 5.3 156.3 ± 37.0 < 0.053 mm 34.8% 57.8% 40.7% Wet 0.053 – 0.5 mm 52.2% 28.7% 26.1% Sieving Size mass 0.5 – 2 mm 13.0% 9.8% 17.6% fraction d > 2 mm 0% 3.7% 15.6% ܥி(ூூ) (µmol/g) 0.20 0.03 0.09 µp -8.8 -8.5 -9.9 σ 1.8 1.4 0.8 Reaction rate p -1 -1 -4 -4 6.5×10 5.1×10 6.8×10-5 parameters (µM ·h ) from batch ܥி(ூூ) (µmol/g) 0.23 0.05 0.13 e reactors µg -9.6 -8.5 -9.9 3.6 2.5 2.8 σg -1 -1 -3 -3 (µM ·h ) 8.5×10 2.9×10 1.2×10-3 Column Porosity θ 0.418 0.564 0.440 θf 0.251 0.395 0.220 θs 0.167 0.169 0.220 Transport Df (m2·h-1) parameters in 3.7×10-6 1.5×10-6 3.4×10-6 the columns f Ds (m2·h-1) 7.5×10-8 7.5×10-9 5.0×10-8 ω (h-1) 0.0001 0.00015 0.00006 a
: Data from previous X-ray Diffraction (XRD) analysis: Q is quartz; Cri is cristobalite; F is feldspar; Cal is calcite; H is hematite; and M is magnetite.15 b : Iron phases were characterized by Mössbauer spectroscopy: G is goethite, H is hematite, I is ilmenite (FeTiO3), M is magnetite, M(t+o) is tetrahedral and octahedral Fe in magnetite, S is siderite, PS is phyllosilicate or clay Fe, Pyr is pyrite, and Pyro is M1 and M2 non-equivalent Fe(II) sites in pyroxene. c : Mean and standard deviations of HCl-extractable Fe(II) content for triplicate experiments. d : Wet sieving size distribution fractions in weight. e : The parameters were fitted from Tc(VII) reduction in the batches by multi-rate reaction model. The subscript “p” and “g” referred to experiments with pristine and ground sediments, respectively. is the mean of reaction rates. f : The parameters were fitted from Br- diffusion in the columns by dual-domain diffusion model.
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0.5 mm F) XCT for sed. C Figure 1. XCT images (top three named A, B, and C) are the cross sections in the columns (diameter of 2.54 cm) packed with sediments from depths of 30.8 − 31.1 m (A), 39.0 − 39.3 m (B), and 51.5 − 51.8 m (C). Binary image (image D and F) illustrates the distribution of pore spaces in the sediment (showing example for the sediment from 51.5 − 51.8 m), where yellow denotes pores and grey indicates the mixture of solids and fine pores as identified by XCT. Image E is the superimposed XCT and autoradiography images of the sediment from 51.5 − 51.8 m depth, showing Tc as bright spots (in image E). Image F illustrates the distribution of pores spaces (yellow area) at the same area of image E. 24 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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PS_Exp. PS_Model
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Figure 2. Experimental (symbols) and calculated (lines) Tc(VII) concentrations in the batch reactors containing pristine sediments (PS, blue) and ground sediments (GS, red). The numbers next to the data are soil/water ratios for each experiment. The symbols and bars are the mean and variation of the results from duplicate experiments.
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C: 51.5 − 51.8 m
D3) Fe(II) B: 39.0 − 39.3 m 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 L (cm)
Figure 3. Experimental (symbols) and model simulated (lines) Br- (A1−C1), dissolved Tc(VII) (A2−C2), and total Tc(IV+VII) (A3−C3) concentrations in the diffusion columns at 1−8 weeks. Figure D1 and D2 are variations of Br- and Tc(VII) concentrations in the bulk solution. Brdiffusion was simulated using the dual-domain diffusion model; Tc(VII) and Tc(IV+VII) concentration profiles were predicted using the dual domain reactive diffusion model (see text). Figure E is the comparison between initial HCl-extractable Fe(II) concentrations (lines) and HClextractable Fe(II) concentrations in the columns at 1 (open symbols: □, ○, and ∆) and 8 (solid
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symbols: ■, ♦, and ▼) weeks. The points and bars are mean and variation of the results from the two half columns.
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