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Coupled Redox Transformation of Chromate and Arsenite on Ferrihydrite Elizabeth B. Cerkez, Narayan Bhandari, Richard J Reeder, and Daniel R. Strongin Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/es505666w • Publication Date (Web): 06 Feb 2015 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on February 8, 2015
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Environmental Science & Technology
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Coupled Redox Transformation of Chromate and Arsenite on
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Ferrihydrite
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Elizabeth B. Cerkez1, Narayan Bhandari1, Richard J. Reeder2 and Daniel R. Strongin1,*
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1
Department of Chemistry, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19122
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2
Department of Geosciences, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York 11794
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*
To whom correspondence should be addressed;
[email protected] 21 22
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Abstract
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The redox chemistry of chromate (Cr(VI)) and arsenite (As(III)) on the iron
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oxyhydroxide, ferrihydrite (Fh), was investigated. Attenuated total reflectance Fourier
26
transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR), X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) and
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X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) were used to determine the composition of the
28
adsorbed layer on Fh during and after exposure to solution phase Cr(VI) and As(III). The
29
individual exposure of Cr(VI) or As(III) on Fh resulted in the adsorption of the respective
30
species and there was no change in the oxidation state of either species. In contrast,
31
exposure of Fh simultaneously to Cr(VI) and As(III) led to an adsorbed layer that was
32
primarily Cr(III) and As(V). This redox transformation occurred over various
33
experimental conditions, at pH 3, 5 and 7 and in the presence or absence of O2, as
34
demonstrated by in-situ ATR-FTIR results. A similar complete redox transformation was
35
not observed at a solution of pH 9, due to minimal Cr(VI) adsorption. Post-reaction XPS
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showed that the majority of adsorbed arsenic existed as As(V) at pH 3, 5 and 7, while
37
As(III) was the main species detected at pH 9. At pH 3 the redox chemistry between
38
Cr(VI) and As(III) led to a As(V) product surface loading of ~600 mmol/kg.
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Experiments performed in the absence of dissolved O2 resulted in less As(V) on the
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surface compared to experiments in which O2 was present for equivalent reaction times.
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Environmental Science & Technology
1. Introduction
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The interaction of toxic inorganic contaminants in the environment is becoming
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an increasingly important area of study as abandoned industrial sites are reclaimed for
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new uses. The toxicity, mobility and fate of various inorganic contaminants are often
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influenced by their redox speciation, and hence a microscopic understanding of the
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critical redox chemical processes would be expected to help in the development of
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effective remediation strategies.1
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Two inorganic contaminants relevant to the present contribution are chromium
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and arsenic. In general, chromium in the environment is typically in the form of trivalent
55
[Cr(III)] and hexavalent [Cr(VI)] species. The toxic hexavalent species occur mainly as
56
the oxyanions chromate, CrO42-, and dichromate, Cr2O72-. Cr(III) forms a sparingly
57
soluble precipitate (Cr(OH)3) in the pH range of ~6-11.5; only below pH 3 does it exist as
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the Cr+3 ion. At pH values below 9, inorganic arsenite, As(III), mainly occurs as a
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neutral species (H3AsO3), while arsenate, As(V), generally exists as the oxyanions
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H2AsO4– (pH 2-6.8) and HAsO4–2 (pH 6.8-12). Unlike Cr compounds, all As species are
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generally considered toxic to human beings;2, 3 albeit As(III) is more toxic and mobile
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than As(V).4 In the environment Cr(VI) and As(III) are found in a variety of settings that
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include soil, groundwater, and industrial wastewater. An analysis of Cr and As speciation
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at particular acid mine drainage (AMD) sites, for example, has shown significant
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amounts of Cr(VI) and As(III) in the aqueous phase.5 Additionally, the US
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Environmental Protection Agency estimates that Cr and As are two major heavy
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metal(loid)s present in most superfund sites.
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Significant prior research has investigated the individual redox chemistries of
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Cr(VI) and As(III) in solution,6-9 as well as the individual adsorption behaviors of Cr(VI)
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and As(III) on environmentally relevant surfaces that include iron (oxy)hydroxides.10-14
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Research presented in this contribution builds on prior surface related studies and
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addresses the redox chemistry of Cr(VI) and As(III) on the environmentally relevant iron
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oxyhydroxide, ferrihydrite (Fh). The motivation for the current study is two-fold. First, a
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study of the coadsorption of Cr(VI) and As(III) on environmentally relevant surfaces has
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potential relevance to the understanding of redox chemistry occurring in environmental
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settings that contain both contaminants.5,
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results presented in this contribution shed light on how a substrate can facilitate electron
78
transfer between two redox active species. Composite redox reactions between Cr(VI)
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and As(III) can be written as
15-17
Second, on a more fundamental level,
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2HCrO4- + 3H3AsO3 + 5H+ → 2CrIII + 3H2AsO4- + 5H2O
(1)
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2CrO4-2 + 3H3AsO3 + 4H+ → 2CrIII + 3HAsO4-2 + 5H2O
(2)
83 84
The above reactions reflect the changes in species protonation as a function of pH; below
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pH 6.8 eq. 1 predominantly applies while above pH 6.8 we refer to eq. 2.
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Research has generally shown that redox chemistry between aqueous Cr(VI) and
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As(III) in a variety of aqueous environments does not result in the formation of As(V)
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and Cr(III).18 Recent contributions illustrate that the redox chemistry between the two
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species in solution can be facilitated in certain circumstances. For example, studies have
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shown that redox chemistry between aqueous Cr(VI) and As(III) occurs if hydrogen
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peroxide is present19 or if aqueous Cr(VI) and As(III) are irradiated with UV light.14
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Other research has shown that the concurrent reduction of Cr(VI) and oxidation of As(III)
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does occur when the two species are contained within an ice matrix
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of specific micro-organisms.20 Results from the former study suggested that the
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concentration of electron donor (i.e., As(III)) and protons in the grain boundaries of ice
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led to the efficient reduction of Cr(VI).18
18
or in the presence
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The hypothesis tested in the current research is that co-exposure to a solid surface
98
will facilitate redox chemistry between Cr(VI) and As(III). To test the hypothesis we
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exposed Fh to a solution containing both aqueous Cr(VI) and As(III). The surface would
100
concentrate, or co-localize, Cr(VI) and As(III) complexes through the adsorption process
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that would then facilitate electron and/or proton transfer. Oxidation states of the adsorbed
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species before, during, and after exposure to Cr(VI) and As(III) were determined with in
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situ attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR), X-
104
ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS), and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). We
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analyzed the effect of the order of As(III) and Cr(VI) exposure to the Fh surface and the
106
effect of O2 on the system to help elucidate the mechanism by which the coupled
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oxidation-reduction occurs. Our experimental observations showed that the exposure of
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Fh to an aqueous mixture of Cr(VI) and As(III) resulted in the reduction of Cr(VI) to
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Cr(III) and the oxidation of As(III) to As(V) in both anoxic and oxic environments on the
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Fh surface.
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2. Experimental Section
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2.1 Synthesis and characterization of materials: 2-line Fh was prepared using a
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modified
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area measurements of synthesized Fh yielded an average value of 330 ± 20 m2/g, which
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agrees well with the literature.24 Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analysis of the
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sample was also consistent with properties expected for 2-line Fh [see supporting
118
information (SI), Fig. S1].24, 25
21, 22
version of a method developed by Cornell and Schwertmann.23 Surface
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Crystalline aluminum hydroxide (bayerite) used in this study was prepared by
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neutralizing an Al(III)-bearing solution (resulting from AlCl3 addition) with NaOH26
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Briefly, 1 M NaOH was added step-wise to a 0.1 M solution of AlCl3 (initial pH of ~3)
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with constant stirring until the pH reached ~7, at which point a white particle suspension
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was observed. The suspension was dialyzed with de-ionized water (18 MΩ cm-1) for 4-5
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days to remove counter ions, then centrifuged and air-dried. XRD characterization
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showed the material to be primarily bayerite (95%) and a minority amount of the gibbsite
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phase26. The surface area of the material was determined to be 120 ± 1 m2/g.
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2.2 Batch studies: The methodology by which the batch reactions were carried out in this
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study was similar to that used in prior publications from our laboratory that investigated
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the redox chemistry of As(III) on iron oxyhydroxides.27, 28 In brief, 50 mg of dry solid
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powder, Fh, was suspended in 199 mL of 2.5 mM NaCl solution and then sonicated for 5-
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10 minutes to disperse the solid phase into solution. An appropriate amount of As(III)
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and Cr(VI) solutions (from individual 50 mM stock solutions prepared from NaAsO2 and
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K2Cr2O7) were added to the suspension and the pH was maintained at a desired value
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using an autotitrator (718 STAT Titrino, Metrohm). Experiments were performed in
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solutions that were exposed to the ambient atmosphere and hence contained dissolved O2
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and CO2, unless otherwise noted. Other experiments were performed in a glove bag with
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an O2 level below 0.10 mg/L, additionally the suspensions were purged with argon gas
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for 1 hr to exclude dissolved O2..
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2.3 Solution Analysis: Collected samples were centrifuged and filtered through a
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Millipore filter (0.2 µm). Aqueous phase Cr(VI) and As(V) were analyzed using an ion
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chromatograph (IC, Dionex ICS-1000) with a detection limit for each species of ~5 µM
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and ~2 µM, respectively. The IC was equipped with a Dionex IonPac®AS22 (4 mm × 250
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mm) analytical column and a conductivity detector. Details regarding the analytical
146
methodology for As(III) and As(V) species determination were described previously.27
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All the chemicals used in this study, including sodium arsenite (NaAsO2), ferric chloride
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(FeCl3), sodium hydroxide (NaOH), hydrochloric acid (HCl), aluminum chloride (AlCl3),
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and potassium dichromate (K2Cr2O7), were obtained from Sigma Aldrich (analytical
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grade). All batch reactions were conducted in triplicate and calculated standard errors of
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estimation were within 2-7 %.
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2.4 X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS):
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adsorbed on Fh were determined using As and Cr K-edge X-ray absorption near-edge
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structure (XANES) spectroscopy. As discussed in a previous contribution29, prior
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XANES analyses of As-reacted iron (oxy)hydroxides revealed that partial oxidation of
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As(III) was possible upon exposure to the synchrotron beam over the time scale needed
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to collect a conventional near-edge spectrum. To avoid this experimental artifact we have
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taken advantage of rapid data collection using quick-scanning X-ray absorption
Oxidation states of As and Cr species
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spectroscopy (Q-XAS) as implemented at beamline X18B at the National Synchrotron
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Light Source (Brookhaven National Laboratory). The Q-XAS technique developed at
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X18B has been described previously in detail.30, 31 The monochromator was calibrated by
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assigning the first peak in the derivative spectrum of the aqueous As(III) reference
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sample an energy value of 11867 eV.
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Cr K-edge XANES data, which were found not to be subject to such artifact, were
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collected by conventional edge-scan methods. Monochromator calibration was achieved
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by assigning the first peak in the derivative spectrum of a Cr metal foil to 5989 eV. At
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least two scans were averaged to improve signal/noise. Spectra from sorption samples
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(As and Cr) were collected in fluorescence mode using a partially implanted planar
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silicon detector. Spectra for reference samples were collected before and after the
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sorption samples to confirm no change in monochromator calibration. A linear pre-edge
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background was subtracted, and the XANES spectra were normalized using a single post-
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edge point (11915 eV for As; 6075 eV for Cr) as described in a previous study. 27
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Sorption samples were prepared for analysis by centrifuging the reacted
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suspension. The collected solid was washed once with corresponding pH deionized
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water, dried in air, loaded into Lucite sample holders, and sealed with Kapton tape.
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2.5 X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS): Oxidation states of As and Cr species
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adsorbed on Fh were also determined using a VG Scientific XPS, with a Mg Kα X-ray
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source operating at 280 W, 15 kV x 25 mA. Pass energy of 30 eV was used for all
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spectra. The Fe 2p and 3p peak positions were used to eliminate static charge effects and
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all spectra were analyzed using CasaXPS software. Elements present were identified by
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their strongest binding energy peak, Fe 2p (707 eV), As 3d (42 eV), and Cr 2p (572eV).
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XPS normalized peak intensities were calibrated to the surface loading of Cr and As
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species, determined by measuring the amount of Cr(VI) or As(III) from solution for a
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given mass of Fh (known surface area). The raw As and Cr peak areas were normalized
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against the Fe 3p peak area to account for changes in sample position and/or the amount
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of material loaded into the spectrometer. Furthermore, As 3d spectra were processed by
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subtracting XPS spectra for clean Fh (no adsorbate), obtained for the same binding
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energy window.
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2.6 Attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR): The
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experimental apparatus and methodology were the same as described in prior
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publications.27, 28 Briefly, a thin film of Fh ( .05 mg) was prepared on a diamond ATR
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element by depositing a suspension of Fh in H2O and then dried under an argon
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environment. The sample was then enclosed by a Teflon flow cell which allowed the
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passage of a specified solution over the sample. Films were first exposed to H2O at the
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desired pH to equilibrate the film. Most experiments then involved flowing a solution
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containing 0.10 mM Cr(VI) and 0.15 mM As(III) at the selected pH over the sample at a
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rate of 1 mL/min. For experiments where O2 was excluded, the Fh film was dried under
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Ar and sealed to outside air within an Ar purged glove bag. The solutions introduced to
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the flow cell were purged with Ar for 1 hr to remove dissolved O2.
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Some ATR-FTIR spectra were fitted to determine the relative amount of different
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adsorbed species as function of time and pH. Spectral fitting was carried out using Origin
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as a function of pH. The spectra associated with the individually adsorbed species were
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fitted to achieve a R2 of 0.99 at each pH, and our spectra agree well with vibrational data
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reported for the same three adsorbates in prior literature.13,
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selected peak fits of Cr(VI), As(III) and As(V) at pH 5.] These individual fits were then
209
used together to fit experimental data where one or all three species were present on Fh.
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When fitting experimental data associated with the exposure of Fh to As(III) and Cr(VI),
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only the peak areas of the individual synthesized spectra associated with Cr(VI), As(V),
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and As(III) were allowed to vary (energy positions were fixed). Typical fitted
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experimental spectra containing contributions from multiple adsorbed species had a R2 of
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0.99.
32, 33
[see SI, Fig. S2 for
215 216
3. Results and Discussion
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3.1 ATR-FTIR studies of As(III) and Cr(VI) on Fh
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3.1.1 Effect of pH with Simultaneous Exposure
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Figure 1 displays ATR-FTIR data obtained when Fh was exposed to a flowing
220
solution containing 0.10 mM Cr(VI) and 0.15 mM As(III) at pH 3, 5, 7 and 9 (A, B, C
221
and D, respectively) as a function of time. Each data set includes a representative
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spectrum that has been fitted with spectral components for Cr(VI), As(V), and As(III)
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(see section 2.6 for method). Data obtained for pH 3, 5, and 7 show similar behavior
224
where the vibrational modes associated with Cr(VI) grow for a period of time, reach a
225
maximum value (depending on the pH) and then show a continuous decrease with time (a
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complete set of curves for pH 3 showing an isosbestic point is provided in SI, Fig. S3).
227
We attribute the increase in the intensity of the Cr(VI) associated modes at early reaction
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times to its adsorption rate34 on Fh being faster than its consumption via redox reactions
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with As(III). In contrast to Cr(VI), the vibrational mode intensities associated with As(V)
230
show a monotonic rise with time. Vibrational modes attributable to adsorbed As(III) are
231
absent in the pH 3 data set, but are present (albeit weak) in the pH 5 and 7 data sets. To
232
support these statements, selected time points are fitted with Cr(VI), As(III), and As(V)
233
for pH 3, 5 and 7, are shown in SI Fig. S4 and furthermore plots of fitted peak areas (as a
234
function of time) for the individual Cr(VI), As(III) and As(V) contributions to each
235
experimental spectrum, at each pH, are shown in SI Fig. S5.
236
ATR-FTIR spectra associated with the simultaneous exposure of Fh to As(III) and
237
Cr(VI) at pH 9 also show an increasing Cr(VI) vibrational mode intensity, weak
238
compared to other pH conditions, at early reaction times and a loss of these modes at later
239
reaction times. Unlike the lower pH data, the dominant As-derived modes are due to the
240
presence of As(III) and only weak spectral weight is present that can be assigned to
241
As(V) product. A comparison of the vibrational mode absorbance associated with
242
adsorbed Cr(VI) at early reaction times (i.e., 10 minutes: spectra c in each pH data set in
243
Fig. 1) for the different pH data sets shows a decreasing Cr(VI) intensity/absorbance as
244
the solution pH was raised from 3 to 9. This experimental observation is consistent with
245
expected increased electrostatic repulsion between HCrO4-/CrO42- and Fh (pzc of 8.2)35 as
246
the pH is raised from 3 to 9. Based on the fitted vibrational spectra, the binding
247
geometries of the three adsorbates, Cr(VI) (bidentate at low pH, monodentate at high
248
pH13), As(III) (monodentate and outersphere33), and As(V) (primarily bidentate
249
bridging36), are similar whether adsorbed independently or coadsorbed.
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ATR-FTIR data to this point show that As(V) is produced on the surface when
251
Cr(VI) and As(III) are exposed to Fh. Also, the results so far suggest that there is an
252
increasing amount of As(III) oxidation with decreasing pH based on the amount of
253
spectral weight attributable to As(V). We expect that both the increasing Cr(VI)
254
adsorbate concentration and increasing proton concentration with decreasing pH would
255
facilitate the redox reaction (see eqn. 1 and 2).
256
oxidation occurs we note two other experimental observations: 1) the individual
257
adsorption of As(III) on Fh does not result in As(V) formation,27 and 2) the homogeneous
258
solution reaction (in the absence of Fh) between Cr(VI) and As(III) does not result in
259
As(V) formation at any of the solution pH conditions used in this study (see SI, Fig. S6).
260
Therefore, the concomitant reduction of Cr(VI) to Cr(III) would be consistent with the
261
loss of vibrational modes attributable to Cr(VI) at the later reaction times and hence the
262
cause of As(III) oxidation. Due to lack of Cr(III) active vibrational modes, in the
263
vibrational region investigated, the reduction cannot be confirmed by ATR-FTIR. The
264
oxidation state of the Cr product is characterized with XANES and XPS analysis below.
265 266
In order to help determine how As(V)
. 3.1.2 Sequential Exposure of Fh to As(III) and Cr(VI)
267
Further insight into the redox chemistry was obtained by investigating how the
268
production of As(V) was affected by the sequence of exposure of Fh to As(III) and
269
Cr(VI). Experiments were carried out that individually exposed Fh to flowing 0.15 mM
270
As(III) solution or 0.10 mM Cr(VI) solution for 3 h at pH 5. After this initial 3 h
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exposure, the As(III) or Cr(VI) solution was flushed from the reaction cell with pH 5
272
water. The As(III)/Fh and Cr(VI)/Fh systems prepared in this way were then exposed to
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flowing 0.10 mM Cr(VI) and 0.15 mM As(III) solution, respectively. ATR-FTIR data
274
were collected for both these exposure scenarios (Fig. 2A and 2B). Figure 2A shows that
275
the exposure of As(III)/Fh to Cr(VI) led to increases in both Cr(VI) and As(V) vibrational
276
modes. Data presented in Fig. 2B show that the exposure of Cr(VI)/Fh to a flowing
277
solution of As(III) led to a decrease in modes attributable to Cr(VI) and an increase in
278
modes associated with As(V) product. Although some Cr(VI) loss may be due to
279
desorption, the increase of As(V) modes suggests that the electron reduction of Cr(VI)
280
contributes to its loss in surface concentration. Comparing the two exposure scenarios,
281
the Cr(VI)/Fh case produces more As(V) on the surface compared to As(III)/Fh (See SI,
282
Fig. S7). We note that in both exposure scenarios, at the end of reaction, indicated by no
283
further change in mode intensity, we observe that Cr(VI), As(III), and As(V) all coexist
284
on the surface. This result suggests that only a fraction of Cr(VI) and As(III) on Fh react
285
to form As(V).
286 287
3.1.3 Effect of O2 with Simultaneous Exposure
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The effect of O2 on the redox chemistry between As(III) and Cr(VI) was
289
investigated at pH 5 (Fig. 3). In the anoxic case we observe the increase of Cr(VI)
290
vibrational modes reaching a maximum, followed by a continuous decrease in intensity,
291
similar to that observed in the oxic case (Fig. 1, B). Also comparable is the observation of
292
the continuous increase of As(V) vibrational modes. A comparison of the As(V) peak
293
area derived from fitted spectra (Fig. 3 inset), however, shows that less As(V) product
294
forms after 3 hours of reaction in the absence of dissolved O2 (i.e., anoxic case). This
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particular analysis suggests that the presence of dissolved O2 leads to more As(III)
296
oxidation in the presence of Cr(VI) and Fh than in the absence of dissolved O2.
297 298
3.2 Characterization of the adsorbed layer on Fh with XANES and XPS
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3.2.1 Surface Analysis of Batch Studies (XANES and XPS)
300
XANES spectroscopy was carried out to determine the oxidation states of Cr and
301
As on Fh that had been exposed to a solution containing 0.10 mM Cr(VI) and 0.15 mM
302
As(III) at pH 5. Based on the decrease in aqueous concentrations of Cr(VI) and As(III)
303
the loading of Cr and As on Fh was 310 and 610 mmol/kg, respectively, and we note that
304
in all batch experiments completed that no As(V) was detected in the aqueous phase
305
before or after reaction. Figure 4(a) compares Cr K-edge XANES spectra obtained for
306
this sample to Fh that was individually exposed to aqueous Cr(III) and Cr(VI). A
307
prominent pre-edge feature at ~5993 eV is present in the XANES data for Fh that had
308
been exposed to Cr(VI). This pre-edge feature is indicative of the presence of
309
tetrahedrally coordinated Cr(VI) and consistent with chromate adsorbed on the surface.37
310
The feature is absent in the spectrum associated with Fh that had been exposed to
311
solution containing both Cr(VI) and As(III), and the spectrum is instead similar to the
312
Cr(III)/Fh reference spectrum. These data indicate that Cr(VI) is reduced to Cr(III) on Fh
313
in the presence of As(III), as suggested by ATR-FTIR experimentation. Figure 4(b)
314
exhibits complementary As K-edge XANES data collected for Fh that was exposed to a
315
mixture of 0.10 mM Cr(VI) and 0.15 mM As(III) and for individual controls (either
316
As(III) or As(V) adsorbed individually on Fh). XANES data associated with all of the Fh
317
samples exhibit well-resolved As(III) or As(V) edge structures.38 A least-squares linear
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combination fit of the data, using reference spectra for As(III) and As(V) adsorbed
319
individually on Fh, shows that As(III) and As(V) were both present on the Fh sample that
320
was simultaneously exposed to Cr(VI) and As(III), with the majority As species being
321
As(V) (80 ± 5 %) at pH 5. While the surface As complex is not exclusively As(V), the
322
results do support our interpretation of the ATR-FTIR data that the exposure of Fh to
323
both Cr(VI) and As(III) results in the conversion of As(III) to As(V). The XANES data
324
also show that this redox chemistry occurs together with the conversion of Cr(VI) to
325
Cr(III).
326
While our XANES results are limited to the pH 5 oxic experiment, we
327
investigated with XPS the oxidation state of adsorbed Cr and As after Fh was exposed to
328
solution phase As(III) and Cr(VI) at pH 3, 5, 7, and 9. We provide these spectra in the
329
supporting information (SI, Fig S8, Fig S9) and make oxidation state assignments based
330
on comparison to standards adsorbed on Fh. With regard to the oxidation state of
331
adsorbed As, the fitted XPS spectra in general show that there is an increase in the
332
relative proportion of As(V) as the pH of the solution decreases. The fitted pH 9 spectrum
333
shows almost entirely As(III) (>90%) while at pH 3 the adsorbed As exists primarily as
334
As(V). This particular result is consistent with our ATR-FTIR results (Figure 1A) at this
335
pH that show no significant As(III) mode intensity. XPS also suggests that Cr(III) is
336
present on the surface of Fh after exposure to Cr(VI) and As(III) at pH 3, 5, and 7, but the
337
data also contain spectral weight that is attributable to Cr(VI) (SI, Fig. S9). We do not
338
detect Cr(III) with XPS in the pH 9 reaction product, but this is likely due to the
339
concentration of adsorbed Cr being below our detection limit. The loading of Cr on Fh at
340
pH 9 was calculated to be 5 mmol/kg based on an analysis of Cr(VI) loss from solution.
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341
As mentioned before, the ATR-FTIR experiments carried out at pH 9 (Figure 1D) also
342
suggest that the amount of Cr(VI) adsorption is significantly less than at lower pH
343
conditions investigated in this study.
344
XPS data also allow us to compare the relative proportion of As(V) and As(III) on
345
Fh after exposure to 0.10 mM Cr(VI) and 0.15 mM As(III) at pH 5 under both oxic and
346
anoxic conditions. In both these cases the loading of Cr(VI) and As(III) was 310 and 610
347
mmol/kg, respectively. An analysis of the data shows that in the anoxic circumstance ~52
348
% of the adsorbed As on Fh is As(V), while the relative proportion of As(V) is ∼80%
349
(similar to the XANES result) under oxic conditions. These results also support our
350
conclusions from in situ ATR-FTIR results that suggest more As(V) product is formed on
351
Fh in the oxic circumstance (Fig. 3). Finally, we mention that pH 3 XPS data shows
352
exclusively As(V) on Fh after reaction (consistent with ATR-FTIR). The As-loading on
353
the particles was 610 mmol/kg, based on the amount of As(III) that was removed from
354
solution in the presence of Fh. Hence, we estimate that in the pH 3 circumstance the
355
As(V) loading after reaction is also 610 mmol/kg, since we do not detect any aqueous
356
As(V) product (detection limit of 5µM).
357 358
3.2.2 Characterization of Cr(III) product
359
We carried out studies to characterize the nature of the Cr(III) product formed
360
during the Cr(VI) and As(III) redox chemistry on Fh. At no point was aqueous phase
361
Cr(III) experimentally observed during any of the experiments. This experimental
362
observation suggests that the majority of Cr(III) product was present on the iron
363
oxyhydroxide surface, possibly as a surface complex or as a Cr(III), Cr(III)-Fe or Cr(III)-
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364
As bearing secondary phase. To evaluate these possibilities, XRD was carried out on
365
post-reaction samples (see SI, Fig. S10). The X-ray diffraction data showed no
366
experimentally resolvable differences between pure Fh and the reaction product after
367
exposure to Cr(VI) and As(III). To further understand the nature of the surface Cr(III) we
368
compared Cr XANES data from our reaction products to selected Cr(III) reference
369
phases, including chromite (FeCr2O4), a Cr/Fh co-precipitated sample, and amorphous
370
chromium hydroxide [Cr(III)(OH)3]. The latter two spectra were taken from the study by
371
Tang et al. 37 By comparison of the first derivatives of the relevant XANES spectra (See
372
SI, Fig. S11) the Fh co-exposed to Cr(VI) and As(III) is found to be nearly identical to
373
that of amorphous Cr(III) hydroxide, and slightly different than Cr(III) coprecipitated
374
with Fh.37 Finally, analysis of the full EXAFS data did not support the presence of a
375
Cr(III)-arsenate phase, although we cannot entirely rule out its possible formation.
376 377
3.3 Reaction mechanism
378
3.3.1 General Reaction Mechanism
379
Our experimental observations show that Cr(III) and As(V) product form when
380
Fh is exposed to a solution containing both Cr(VI) and As(III) or if one reactant species is
381
adsorbed (Cr(VI) or As(III)) and then exposed to a solution containing only the other
382
reactant as an aqueous species (i.e., As(III) or Cr(VI), respectively). These experimental
383
observations suggest that the surface is providing an energetically favorable pathway for
384
electron transfer between Cr(VI) and As(III) that cannot be achieved when both species
385
interact in the aqueous phase (in the absence of the solid substrate). Fh likely acts to
386
concentrate one or both of the reactants (and intermediate species) in binding geometries
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387
that make the multi-electron transfer process between Cr(VI) and As(III) energetically
388
favorable. We emphasize, however, that our experimental results do not allow us to
389
determine whether both Cr(VI) and As(III) need to be adsorbed to produce As(V)
390
product. It is perhaps useful to point out that prior aqueous-based studies have suggested
391
that the reaction of As(III), which is considered to be a two-electron reductant, and
392
Cr(VI) to form As(V) and Cr(III) product would involve the generation of Cr(IV)
393
intermediate species. Comproportionation of Cr(IV) species would form Cr(V) and the
394
reduction of this latter species by As(III) would lead to Cr(III) product: 39, 40
395 396
Cr(VI) + As(III) → Cr(IV) + As(V)
(3)
397
Cr(VI) + Cr(IV) → 2Cr(V)
(4)
398
2Cr(IV) → Cr(III) + Cr(V)
(5)
399
Cr(V) + As(III) → Cr(III) + As(V)
(6)
400 401
Such a mechanism might be expected to be facilitated by the co-localization of Cr and As
402
species, presumably through their close proximity on a solid surface. Our experimental
403
observations also show that dissolved oxygen, when present, increases the amount of
404
As(V) product. At this time it is not possible to unequivocally determine the role of O2.
405
However, based on prior studies, a possible enhancement in As(V) production could
406
conceivably be due to the interaction of dissolved O2 with intermediate Cr-41 and/or As-
407
19, 33
valence state species.
408
The surface facilitated redox chemistry may be also attributable to potential
409
changes in the redox potentials of Cr(VI) (and intermediate species) and/or As(III) upon
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410
adsorption (compared to the respective Cr(VI) and As(III) aqueous phase species). While
411
we cannot test this possibility in the present research, results from prior studies may be
412
taken to be consistent with such a possibility. With regard to Cr(VI), prior research has
413
shown that adsorbed Cr(VI) on Fe, Al, and Ti oxides demonstrates a much more facile
414
reduction to Cr(III) by organic reductants than does aqueous Cr(VI).42, 43 In a different
415
study, reduction of U(IV) by Fe(II), which was only observed when the species were
416
adsorbed on a hematite surface, was attributed to the change in redox potentials of
417
adsorbed species.44 While the relevance of these prior studies to ours is limited, they do
418
suggest that adsorbed oxidizing species (in our case Cr(VI)) can be more effective
419
oxidizers than their solution phase counterparts in environmental redox reactions.
420 421
3.3.2 The Role of the Electronic Properties of the Solid Substrate
422
Prior research has suggested that small band gap semiconductors, such as Fh, can
423
act as conduits for electron transfer between a donor and acceptor.45, 46 To test whether
424
electron transfer between Cr(VI) and As(III) on Fh requires bulk conduction, we
425
conducted additional experiments where we exposed dielectric nano-dimensioned
426
Al(OH)3 (mixture of bayerite and gibbsite) to Cr(VI) and As(III) under similar conditions
427
to those described here. Post analysis of the surface composition after reaction by
428
XANES (SI, Fig. S12) shows that Cr(III) and As(V) are present, confirming that Cr(VI)
429
is reduced to Cr(III) concomitant with As(III) oxidation to As(V), analogous to our
430
findings for Fh. Hence, exposure of As(III) and Cr(VI) to Al(OH)3 is thought to be the
431
primary factor allowing the experimentally observed redox chemistry between Cr(VI)
432
and As(III). These results suggest that the electrical properties, i.e., positions of
19 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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433
conduction and valence bands, do not have a primary effect on the ability of the surface
434
to aide in the coupled redox of Cr(VI) and As(III) under our experimental conditions.
435
However, future kinetic studies are planned that more carefully compare the rate of
436
reaction on well-defined semiconductor and dielectric surfaces to determine whether
437
electron transport in the substrate bulk/surface plays a significant role.
438
In closing, our results demonstrate that the exposure of high surface area Fh to
439
Cr(VI) and As(III) results in the formation of the more immobile Cr(III) and As(V)
440
products. Hence, it is conceivable that the addition of high surface area metal
441
(oxy)hydroxide to contaminated water environments might be a useful remediation
442
strategy, resulting in contaminant immobilization by adsorption, as well as through redox
443
chemistry. Perhaps more importantly, the results and interpretations presented in this
444
contribution add to our understanding of the fundamental principles that control redox
445
chemistry at the mineral-water interface in environmental settings outside of the
446
remediation framework.
447 448
5.0 Acknowledgements
449
This work was supported by a National Science Foundation (NSF) Collaborative
450
Research in chemistry grant (CHE-0714121). We also thank Syed Khalid and Hyuck
451
Hur for assistance with XAS data collection. Use of the National Synchrotron Light
452
Source, Brookhaven National Laboratory, was supported by the U.S. Department of
453
Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, under Contract No. DE-
454
AC02-98CH10886.
455
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456 457 458 459
Supporting Information
460
The following is included in the Supporting Information. TEM image of synthetic Fh,
461
ATR-FTIR of Cr(VI), As(V) and As(III) individually adsorbed on Fh at pH 5, ATR-FTIR
462
Cr(VI) and As(III) adsorbed on Fh at pH 3, ATR-FTIR fitted spectra of selected time
463
points for pH 3, 5 and 7, ATR-FTIR peak areas of Cr(VI), As(V) and As(III) at pH 3, 5,
464
and 7 versus time, Cr(VI) and As(III) concentration data of aqueous reaction without
465
ferrihydrite, ATR-FTIR peak areas of Cr(VI), As(V) and As(III) at pH 5 versus time
466
comparing order of exposure, XPS of As 3d region for batch reactions, XPS of Cr 2p
467
region for batch reactions, XRD patterns of reaction products, 1st derivative Cr XANES
468
data, XANES of Cr and As from pH 5 batch reaction with Al(OH)3, and XPS of As 3d
469
and Cr 2p regions for As(III)/Fh reacted with aqueous Cr(VI). This material is available
470
free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 21 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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479
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634
Figure captions:
635
Figure 1: ATR-FTIR of Fh that was exposed to a solution containing both 0.10 mM
636
Cr(VI) and 0.15 mM As(III) at pH 3, 5, 7 and 9, (A, B, C, and D, respectively) for (a) 0
637
min, (b) 5 min, (c) 10 min , (d) 30 min, (e) 60 min, and (f) 120 min, (g) 180 min, (h) 240
638
min, and (i) 300 min. The spectra are offset from one another for clarity. Plot (e) also
639
shows the fitting of modes for Cr(VI), As(V) and As(III). All plots were fitted in the
640
same manner but omitted for clarity.
641 642
Figure 2: (A) ATR-FTIR of Fh (a) in pH 5 H2O, (b) after exposure to a flowing solution
643
of 0.15 mM As(III) for 120 min, (c) after flushing with pH 5 H2O for 15 min, and after
644
exposure to flowing 0.10 mM Cr(VI) solution for (d) 10 min, (e) 30 min, (f) 60 min, and
645
(g) 120 min. (B) ATR-FTIR of Fh (a) in pH 5 water, (b) after exposure to a flowing
646
solution of 0.10 mM Cr(VI) for 120 min, (c) after flushing with pH 5 H2O for 15 min,
647
and after exposure to flowing 0.15 mM As(III) solution for (d) 10 min, (e) 30 min, (f) 60
648
min, (g) 120 min., and 180 min. All As(III) and Cr(VI) solutions were at pH 5.
649 650
Figure 3: ATR-FTIR of Fh that was exposed to a flowing solution of 0.10 mM Cr(VI)
651
and 0.15 mM As(III) at pH 5 for (a) 0 min, (b) 5 min, (c) 10 min , (d) 30 min, (e) 60 min,
652
(f) 120 min, (g) 180 min, (h) 240 min, and (i) 300 min under anoxic conditions. Inset
653
shows comparison of As(V) peak area (arb. units) at pH 5 anoxic (squares) and pH 5 oxic
654
(circles) conditions. Anoxic case shows similar reaction to oxic case, growth and then
655
decrease in mode attributed to Cr(VI) coupled with the constant growth of As(V)
656
vibrational modes, but less As(V) production.
29 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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657
Figure 4: (a) Normalized Cr K-edge XANES spectra of Fh that was individually exposed
658
to Cr(VI), Cr(III), and for Fh that was exposed to a solution containing both Cr(VI) and
659
As(III). (b) Normalized As K-edge XANES spectra of Fh that was individually exposed
660
to As(III), As(V), and for Fh that was exposed to a solution containing both Cr(VI) and
661
As(III). All exposure times were 12 h and the solution pH was 5 in all cases.
662
30 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 30 of 35
Page 31 of 35
663
Environmental Science & Technology
Figures:
664 665
As(V)
A A
As(III)
As(V)
B
.004
.004
As(III)
666
668 669
Cr(VI)
Absorbance
667
Absorbance
Cr(VI)
i h g f e
i h g f e
670 d c b a
d c b a
671 672
950
900
850
800
750
950
700
-1
C
850
As(V) As(III)
678 679
D
.002
As(III)
Absorbance
Absorbance
Cr(VI) i h g f e
h g f e d
c b a
c b a
950
682
Cr(VI)
i
d
680 681
700
As(V)
675
677
750
Wavenumbers (cm )
674
676
800
-1
Wavenumbers (cm )
673
900
900
850
800
750
700
-1
950
900
850
800
750 -1
Wavenumbers (cm )
Wavenumbers (cm )
Figure 1
683 684 685 31 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
.001
Environmental Science & Technology
686
A
As(V)
As(III)
Page 32 of 35
B
.002
As(V)
Cr(VI)
687
As(III)
.004
Cr(VI)
688
691
Absorbance
690
Absorbance
689
h
g
g f e
692 693
f e d c b a
d c b a
694 950
695
900
850
800
750
700
950
Wavenumbers (cm-1)
850
800
750
Wavenumbers (cm-1)
696 697
900
Figure 2
698 699 700 701 702
32 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
700
Page 33 of 35
Environmental Science & Technology
Peak Area
1.5 Oxic Anoxic
.002
0.5
As(V) 0
100
200
As(III)
300
Absorbance
Time (min)
Cr(VI)
i h g f e d c b a 950
703 704
900
850
800
750
Wavenumbers (cm-1) Figure 3
33 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
700
Environmental Science & Technology
Normalized Absorbance
2.0
Page 34 of 35
(a)
1.5
1.0
0.5
Cr(VI)/Fh Cr(III)/Fh
0.0
Cr(VI)/As(III)/Fh
5.96
5.98
6.00
6.02
6.04
6.06
11.89
11.90
Photon Energy (keV)
Normalized Absorbance
5.0
(b)
4.0
3.0
2.0 As(III)/Fh
1.0
As(V)/Fh
As(III)/Cr(VI)/Fh
0.0 11.85
11.86
11.87
11.88
705
Photon Energy (keV)
706
Figure 4
707 708 709 710 711 712 713 34 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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714
Environmental Science & Technology
TOC
715 716 717 718 719 720 721 722 723 724 725 726 727 728 729
35 ACS Paragon Plus Environment