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Quantifying technetium and strontium bioremediation potential in flowing sediment columns. Clare L Thorpe, Gareth T.W. Law, Jonathan R. Lloyd, Heather A Williams, Nick Atherton, and Katherine Morris Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b02652 • Publication Date (Web): 02 Oct 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on October 5, 2017
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Quantifying technetium and strontium
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bioremediation potential in flowing sediment
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columns.
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Clare L. Thorpe1†, Gareth T. W. Law1/2, Jonathan R. Lloyd1, Heather A. Williams3, Nick
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Atherton4, Katherine Morris1*.
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1
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Environmental Science, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, The University of
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Manchester, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK.
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2
Research Centre for Radwaste Disposal and Williamson Research Centre for Molecular
Centre for Radiochemistry Research, School of Chemistry, The University of Manchester,
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Manchester, M13 9PL, UK.
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3
Nuclear Medicine Centre, Manchester Royal Infirmary, Manchester, M13 9WL, UK.
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4
Sellafield Ltd., Land Quality, Sellafield, Seascale, Cumbria, CA20 1PG, UK.
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* Corresponding author:
[email protected] 14
†
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Engineering, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, S1 3JD, UK.
Current Address: Immobilization Science Laboratory, Department of Materials Science and
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Radioactively contaminated land, metastable technetium-99, strontium, bioreduction, gamma
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camera imaging.
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Abstract
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The high-yield fission products 99Tc and 90Sr are found as problematic radioactive contaminants
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in groundwater at nuclear sites. Treatment options for radioactively contaminated land include
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bioreduction approaches and this paper explores
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range of biogeochemical conditions stimulated by electron donor addition methods. Dynamic
24
column experiments with sediment from the Sellafield nuclear facility, completed at site relevant
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flow conditions, demonstrated that Fe(III)-reducing conditions had developed by 60 days.
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Sediment reactivity towards 99Tc was then probed using a 99mTc(VII) tracer at 0.5 mm which were removed by hand picking. Grains were generally coated with
138
clay-sized iron oxides. X-ray fluorescence confirmed that the sediment comprised Si (30.4 wt
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%), Al (9.4 wt %), Fe (5.0 wt %), K (3.3 wt %), Mg (1.3 wt %), Na (1.2 wt %), Ti (0.4 wt %), Ca
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(0.4 wt %), Mn (0.1 wt %), and Sr at 102 ppm. The total iron was approximately 890 mmol kg-1
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and between 80-100 mmol kg-1 of the sediment Fe(III) was extractable using a 1 hour 0.5 N HCl
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digestion, an indicator of bioavailable Fe(III)
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Sellafield sediment was readily bioavailable consistent with other studies on Sellafield near
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surface materials [14, 15, 31]. The total organic carbon content of the soils was determined as 0.13 ±
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0.01 % using a LECO CR-412 Carbon Analyser. After equilibration with synthetic groundwater
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for 24 hours, the sediment pH was 7.2, bracketing typical on site pH values (pH 5 – 8) [12].
[51]
. This suggested ~10 % of the total iron in the
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Column set up
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Acrylic columns (20 cm x 3.2 cm i.d.), total volume 160 cm3, were packed with ~ 160 g (volume
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145 cm3) of moist sediment. A plug of glass wool (~ 1 cm) was used to cap the top and bottom
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of the columns to minimize sediment movement and ~1 cm quartz sand to optimize fluid flow in
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the columns (SI Figure 1). The synthetic groundwater was pumped upwards through the columns
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with a flow rate of 4.1 ml hr-1 (5 x 10-6 ms-1) using a Watson–Marlow peristaltic pump. Flow was
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established in columns using filtered (< 0.45 µm) synthetic regional groundwater of composition:
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KCl (0.09 mmol L-1), MgSO4.7H2O (0.4 mmol L-1), NaNO3 (0.3 mmol L-1), NaCl (0.16 mmol L-
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1
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representative of the regional groundwater near Sellafield and in selected column treatments was
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augmented with 3 mmol L-1 acetate as an electron donor (Table 1). Acetate was selected as an
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electron donor as it has been used extensively in past work on anaerobic processes including
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Fe(III) reduction and has been shown to promote the generation of alkalinity and raised pH in
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Sellafield sediment microcosms with elevated nitrate concentrations which is potentially
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beneficial in the treatment of strontium-90 in groundwaters
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concentrations and organics derived from anthropogenic activities are present in selected
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groundwater monitoring wells on site[12] and the redox state of the subsurface is variable with
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groundwater oxygen present at up to 0.3 mmol L-1
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temperature in the dark throughout the experimental programme. The synthetic groundwater was
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stored in sterile reservoirs at room temperature in the dark and was refreshed every 6 days.
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Throughout the experiment the pH of the influent groundwater remained at 7.2 and
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concentrations of acetate, nitrate and sulfate remained within 10 % of the target values in Table
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1. The initial pore volume of the column prior to experimentation was determined by the addition
), CaCO3 (0.1 mmol L-1), and NaHCO3 (2.8 mmol L-1)[52]. The synthetic groundwater is
[53]
[14,31]
. Indeed, both elevated nitrate
. Columns were maintained at room
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of a 5 ppm Br- tracer to each column which was then monitored to define the Br- breakthrough
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curve (SI Figure 1).
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Column treatments
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Experiments were separated into “bioreduction” and “post-bioreduction” treatments. For the first
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60 days, five of the six columns were bioreduced through addition of 3 mmol L-1 sodium acetate,
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which has been shown to be an effective bio-stimulant for representative Sellafield sediments [14,
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15, 31]
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as such represented a ‘natural attenuation’ control (Table 1). Strontium (12 µmol L-1) was added
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continuously to all six columns. The treated columns and control were run for 60 days, the flow
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rate stopped and within 4 hours they were then imaged at a gamma camera imaging facility at the
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Nuclear Medicine Department, Central Manchester University Hospitals. When positioned in the
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gamma camera, the columns were then spiked with 99mTc (~7 MBq in 1 ml; 3.5 x 10-13 mols) and
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the flow restarted to image
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radioactive decay period was necessary to allow the 99mTc (half-life 6 hrs) to decay to levels that
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would allow safe handling; here, the columns were capped and stored without pumping at 4oC in
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the dark for 5 days. After decay, the columns were transported back to the laboratory where flow
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was re-instigated under different experimental regimes for a further 50 days. During this post-
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bioreduction period, a range of different treatments (Table 1) were undertaken to examine 99mTc
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reactivity: (A) the non-acetate amended groundwater system representing a natural attenuation
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control; (B) the system with continual acetate amendment; (C) a bioreduced system where
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acetate was then pulsed (5 days acetate additions, 15 days no acetate additions); (D) a bioreduced
. The remaining column was pumped with synthetic groundwater only (i.e. acetate free), and
99m
Tc behavior under flow conditions. After imaging for 12 hours, a
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system with no further acetate amendment; (E) a bioreduced system where air was then bubbled
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into the synthetic groundwater (0.31 mM O2); and (F) a bioreduced system where nitrate was
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then added at elevated levels.
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Sampling and geochemical analysis
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The column influent and effluent were monitored at regular intervals during experiments. In the
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effluent, pH and the concentrations of acetate, SO42-, NO2-, NO3-, and Fe(II), were measured to
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track the progress of terminal electron accepting processes and total Fe, Mn, Al, Ca, Sr and Mg
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to assess changes in sediment geochemistry. Eh and pH were measured immediately using
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calibrated electrodes (Denver-Basic). Porewater NO2-, Mn, and Fe(II) were measured
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spectrophotometrically [54-56]. Acetate, SO42-, NO3- and in tracer tests, Br- were measured by ion
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chromatography on samples stored at 4 °C prior to analysis. Cation concentrations (total Mg, Al,
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Fe, Mn, Sr and Ca) were measured by ICP-AES on acidified (2% HNO3) samples. The dissolved
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O2 concentration of the influent synthetic groundwater was periodically measured using the
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Winkler titration [57].
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At experiment end points (115 days), columns were extruded and sampled under a N2
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atmosphere at 2 cm intervals and bioavailable Fe(II) as a proxy for Fe(III)-reduction was
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measured. Here, sediment samples were digested in 0.5 N HCl for one hour and aqueous Fe(II)
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(filtered < 0.2 µm) was measured by ferrozine analysis
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sulfate reduction with noticeable blackening of the sediment evident. X-ray fluorescence was
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conducted to ascertain the chemical composition of the sediment (Thermo ARL 9400 XRF).
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Additionally, at experiment end points the chemical composition of the sediment was measured
[51]
. Sediments showed evidence for
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by microwave digestion of 0.1 g of sediment in 2 ml 50 % HF and 2 ml 16 M HNO3 followed by
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analysis by ICP-AES. Finally, sequential extractions were used on selected samples to explore
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differences in the distributions of Fe and Sr using operationally defined, chemical lixivants and
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under anaerobic conditions where appropriate
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included a 1 hour extraction with 1 M MgCl2 (exchangeable fraction), a 24 hour extraction with
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1 M sodium acetate (carbonate associated fraction), a 24 hour 0.1 M ammonium oxalate
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extraction (oxidisable fraction), a 6 hour 6 M H2O2 extraction (reducible fraction), and a 12 hour
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aqua regia extraction (residual fraction).
[58-59]
. The sequential extraction methodology
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Gamma camera imaging and analysis
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99m
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gamma emission (140 keV). Imaging with the isotope is common in nuclear medicine, but has
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also been applied innovatively in environmental systems
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reactivity of the treated sediments toward Tc was assessed using
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(bioreduction end-point) and 115 days (post-bioreduction treatment and experiment end-point)
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columns were transported to the Nuclear Medicine Centre at the Manchester Royal Infirmary for
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imaging. Here,
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pertechnetate in deionized water. The imaging was initiated with introduction of a 1 ml spike of
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~7.0 MBq
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tubing at the bottom of the column at a flow rate of 5 x 10-6 m s-1. Gamma images were acquired
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every 20 minutes on a Siemens Symbia T6 dual-headed gamma camera and were processed
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using GE Xeleris software. This provided a decay corrected vertical 99mTc gamma image through
Tc is a metastable nuclear isomer of
99m
99
Tc with a 6 hour half-life which decays to
[15, 22-24, 50, 60]
99
Tc by
. In the current study the
99m
Tc imaging. At 60 days
99m
TcO4- was introduced from a dilution of pharmacologically pure sodium
Tc (3.5 x 10-11 g
99m
Tc; 3.5 x 10-13 moles; 3.5 x 10-10 mol L-1) into the influent
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the columns. The flow rate (5 x 10-6 m s-1) allowed ~1.2 pore volumes to pass through each
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column over the 12 hour imaging period during which time the 99mTc was diluted approximately
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50 fold (from 3.5 x 10-10 mol l-1 to a final concentration in the order of 7 x 10-12 mol l-1). Decay
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correction was applied after data acquisition and the errors reported on
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the γ-camera counting error.
99m
Tc activities refer to
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Reactive transport modelling and geochemical modelling
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The decay corrected radiometric data coupled to the time and flow rate information for the
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experiments allowed the transport of
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STANMOD user interface
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was used to predict the saturation index of key Fe(II) bearing minerals.
[61]
99m
Tc to be modelled using the CXTFIT code with the
. For thermodynamic modelling, PHREEQC-2 (Minteq database)
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Results and discussion
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Column geochemistry during biostimulation with acetate: days 0-60
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In the control column pumped with synthetic groundwater not amended with acetate (Column A;
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which represents natural attenuation conditions), minor depletion of effluent nitrate, and no
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significant change to Fe, or sulfate concentrations were observed over 60 days (96 pore volumes)
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(Figure 1). This confirmed that the organic carbon in the sediment (total organic carbon 0.13 ±
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0.01 %) did not stimulate terminal electron accepting processes beyond nitrate reduction during
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the experiment. In contrast, bioreduction by continuous addition of 3 mmol L-1 acetate resulted in
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microbially-mediated metal reducing conditions in all of the other columns (systems B-F) within
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28 days (Figure 1). Past work using batch experiments shows that Sellafield sediments host a
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complex microbial community with a diverse range of bacterial phyla. When stimulated with an
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electron donor such as acetate, and/or lactate, the diversity of the microbial community was
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reduced and an increase in close relatives of known nitrate reducing species of the order
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Bacillales (e.g. Bacillus niacini) and Pseudomonadales (e.g. Pseudomonas peli), and metal
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reducing species of the orders Clostridiales (e.g. Desulfosporosinus sp.; Alkaliphilus
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crotonatoxidans; Desulfitobacterium metallireducens), Burkholderiales (e.g. Rhodoferax
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ferrireducens), Enterobacteriales (e.g. Serratia sp.) and Desulfuromonadales (e.g. Geobacter sp.)
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were observed
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acetate concentration in the column effluents between 20 - 60 % of that added (Figure 1B).
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Complete removal of 0.3 mmol L-1 nitrate, added continuously in the influent synthetic
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groundwater, occurred within 3 days (5 pore volumes) and gas evolution occurred in the columns
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implying active denitrification to N2 or N2O. Nitrate levels then remained below the detection
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limit over the first 60 days confirming robust nitrate-reducing conditions had developed within
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the acetate-amended systems (Figure 1C). Soluble manganese was also detected in the column
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effluents after 10 days indicating that active Mn(IV) reduction was occurring (data not shown).
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Aqueous Fe(II) was detected at low concentrations in effluents from 28 days confirming that
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Fe(III) reduction had developed (Figure 1D). Past research suggests that Fe(II) ingrowth into
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bioreducing sediments precedes the appearance of Fe(II) in solution, implying that active Fe(III)
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reduction likely started within column sediments before 28 days
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the influent synthetic groundwater at 0.4 mmol L-1 but did not significantly decrease in the
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column effluents over the first 60 days (96 pore volumes) indicating that sulfate-reducing
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conditions had not developed at the first
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99m
[7,14,62]
. Consumption of influent acetate in columns B-F was occurring with the
[24]
. Sulfate was also present in
99m
Tc imaging at 60 days (Figure 1E). Thus the first
Tc scan was completed on column systems (B-F) that were predominantly Fe(III)- rather than
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sulfate-reducing. Throughout the experiment, the effluent pH values in acetate amended systems
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were between 7.5 - 7.8, consistently higher than the pH in the unamended control column
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measured consistently at pH 7.2. This was presumably a result of alkalinity generated as a result
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of nitrate reduction (CHCOO- + 4NO3- → 4NO2- + CO2 + H2O; CHCOO- + 2NO2- + 2H+ →
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2N2O + HCO3- + CO2 + H2O + 2OH-; CHCOO- + 4N2O → 4N2 + HCO3- + CO2 + H2O) and
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Fe(III) reduction (CHCOO- + 8FeOOH + 15H+ → 8Fe2+ + 2HCO3- + 12H2O) [14, 31].
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Imaging Technetium-99 behavior after 60 days of acetate amendment
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In the unamended oxic control column,
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in previous work where reducing conditions were not present, sub-nanomolar TcO4- behaved as a
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conservative tracer
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good agreement with that of the Br- tracer confirming largely conservative behavior (SI Figure
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1). The data provided effective porosity estimates of between 41 – 43 % for the columns,
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measured from five Br- and one
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column, a best fit model of Br- transport was simulated using STANMOD software (based on
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CXTFIT code [61]). Here, the model parameters gave a dispersion coefficient of 0.20 cm2 h-1 and
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a velocity of 4.0 x 10-6 m s-1. The 99mTc transport data under oxic conditions agreed well with the
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Br- curve, with values of 0.21 cm2 h-1 and 4.2 x 10-6 m s-1 for the dispersion coefficient and
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velocity respectively (SI Figure 1C). This experimentally derived velocity is consistent with the
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pumping value of 5 x 10-6 m s-1 and is typical of flow rates through sand and gravel in the
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Sellafield shallow subsurface of approximately 10-6 m s-1 [12, 15, 63].
[15, 50]
99m
Tc was not retained in the column (Figure 2) and, as
. Indeed, in this column, the breakthrough curves for TcO4- showed
99m
Tc breakthrough curve (SI Figure 1C). For the unamended
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Tc (~ 7 MBq; ~ 3.5 x 10-13
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Gamma camera imaging after the addition of a 1 ml spike of
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moles) to each flowing column at 60 days showed consistent results across all acetate amended
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columns with > 99 % of the added spike retained on contact with the first 6 cm of the column (5
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cm of sediment excluding the glass wool plug) (Figure 2; SI Table 1). This reactive zone in the
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columns contained approximately 27 g of sediment and, assuming uniform Tc distribution,
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yielded retention of Tc concentrations of approximately 1.3 x 10-14 mol g-1 on sediments. This
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fast retention of
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exposure to actively Fe(III)-reducing sediment [15, 22-24]. In all systems, technetium concentrations
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were well below the theoretical solubility limit of hydrous TcO2 (~ 10-8 mol l-1 [64]). This implies
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sequestration occurred via reduction with surface bound Fe(II) (e.g. TcO4- + 3Fe2+ + 9H2O →
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TcO2.2H2O(s) + 3Fe(OH)3(s) + 5H+)[3, 9]; with resultant sorption of the reduced Tc [22-24].
99m
Tc in Fe(III)-reducing experiments is consistent with past results from
99m
Tc
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Technetium behaviour in post bioreduction treatments
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After bioreduction for 60 days and radiological decay storage without flow at 4 °C for 5 days, the
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experiment continued between 65 – 115 days with several different column treatments. The
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reactivity of columns to
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column perturbation treatments were: (A) an non-acetate amended groundwater system; (B) a
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system that had acetate continuously added to it; (C) a system where acetate addition was pulsed
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(5 days electron donor addition, 15 days no electron donor addition); (D) a system with no
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further acetate addition (re-oxidation); (E) an oxygenated system where air was bubbled into the
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synthetic groundwater prior to addition to the column (0.31 mmol L-1 O2); and (F) a system
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where 10 mM nitrate was added to explore the impact of high nitrate concentrations on Tc
99m
Tc after these different perturbations was re-tested at 115 days. The
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immobilization after electron donor addition had ceased. These scenarios were chosen to explore
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a range of credible in-situ delivery options for groundwater treatment at nuclear sites (constant
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electron donor and staggered electron donor amendments) as well as explore the impact of
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oxidative perturbations on Tc immobilization in the sediments. After reaction with 99mTc at 115
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days and imaging, columns were then left to radiologically decay at 4 °C without pumping, and
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at 120 days, the non-active sediments were extruded, sectioned and then underwent a range of
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geochemical analyses.
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In treatment A, the non-acetate amended synthetic groundwater system, no significant
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geochemical changes were observed between days 65 and 115 (Figure 2). After sediment
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sectioning, a 0.5 HCl extraction was possible at 2 cm intervals and this showed no detectable
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Fe(II) was present in the sediments (Figure 2). Furthermore, sequential extractions on the end-
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point column sediment from column A showed that greater than 90 % of Fe was present in the
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‘residual’ fraction presumably as refractory clays or other recalcitrant phases (SI Table 2). The
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spike of
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conservative tracer as expected in the absence of significant Fe(II)[14, 15, 24].
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In treatment B, the column continuously stimulated with 3 mmol L-1 acetate for 115 days,
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immobilization of
343
with greater than 90 % of the Tc retained in the bottom 2 - 4 cm of the column where the 99mTc
344
first contacted the sediment (Figure 2; SI Table 1). Assuming approximately 17 g per 2 cm
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section of sediment in the column, this represents retention of approximately 2.0 x 10-14 mol g-1
346
99m
347
such that robust sulfate reduction had developed at 65 days after pumping was restarted:
348
CHCOO- + SO42- → 2HCO3- + HS- (Figure 1E). Sulfate was present at 0.4 mmol L-1 in influent
TcO4- added to this system was not retained and the pertechnetate behaved as a
99m
99m
Tc(VII) within the column was essentially complete (greater than 99.9 %)
Tc (Figure 2). Here, bioreduction progressed through nitrate and Fe(III)/Mn(IV) reduction,
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synthetic groundwater, and concentrations in the column effluent had dropped to zero by 115
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days. At the experiment end-point, the sediments were black and smelled of H2S when reacted
351
with 0.5 M HCl suggesting the presence of FeS. The 0.5 N HCl extractable Fe was at
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approximately 50 % Fe(II)/Fe(III) throughout the column (Figure 2). In this, and all columns
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during any acetate amendments, minimal aqueous Fe (< 10 µmol L-1) was detected in column
354
effluents, presumably due to the low solubility of Fe(II) at the experimental pH of 7.5 or greater
355
(Figure 1). Indeed, mass balance considerations confirm that less than 0.5 % of the total
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bioavailable Fe(III) in the column was reductively removed as soluble Fe(II) in effluents (SI
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Section 1). Furthermore, thermodynamic modelling of the column effluents at 115 days predicted
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super-saturation with regard to Fe(II)-bearing minerals siderite (FeCO3), magnetite (Fe3O4) and
359
makinawite (FeS) (SI Table 3), supporting experimental observations. Finally, for column B, the
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sequential extraction data suggested a significant increase in Fe present in the ‘carbonate
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associated’ fraction throughout the column after bioreduction (SI Table 2). This is consistent
362
with a significant increase in Fe(II)-bearing mineral phases (e.g. siderite (Fe(II)CO3), poorly
363
crystalline monosulfides (FeS), and vivianite (Fe(II)3(PO4)2.8H2O)) extracted during the
364
“carbonate associated” lixivant
365
acetate clearly led to the formation of FeS resulting in sulfidic sediments. Indeed, as observed in
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previous studies, a rapid rate of 99Tc immobilization was occurring which was comparable to, if
367
not faster than, that observed in actively Fe(III)-reducing sediment where FeS was not present [14,
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19,22, 67-68]
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In treatment C, the ‘pulsed’ electron donor column, where 3 mmol L-1 acetate was pumped into
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the column at the standard flow rate for 5 days out of every 20 days, there were periods of
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biogeochemical activity stimulated by the electron donor addition. For example, whilst acetate
[65-66]
. As discussed, in column B continuous stimulation with
(Figure 2).
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addition was occurring, effluent nitrate concentrations decreased (Figure 1C), Fe(II) was
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detected transiently at low concentrations in solution (Figure 1D), and sulfate concentrations
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decreased (Figure 1E). By contrast, during periods of no acetate addition, nitrate and sulfate were
375
observed in column effluent indicating that biogeochemical activity had slowed. The 99mTc spike
376
was introduced during a period where no acetate had been added to the column for 15 days, and
377
analysis of the sectioned sediments for 0.5 N HCl extractable Fe(II) showed no Fe(II) in the 0-6
378
cm fractions suggesting significant reoxidation to Fe(III) had occurred, with Fe(II) increasing up
379
to approximately 40 % Fe(II) above 6 cm (Figure 2). Retention of the added Tc occurred
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between 6 and 18 cm in the column where 0.5 N HCl extractable Fe(II) was present and clearly
381
above the zone of reoxidised sediment that had developed in the first 0–6 cm during 15 days of
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synthetic groundwater flow without acetate (Figure 2). In terms of retention, 99 % of the
383
spike was distributed across the diffuse zone between 6 - 18 cm (Figure 2; SI Table 1). Despite a
384
vast stoichiometric excess of Fe(II) in sediments above 6 cm in the column (~5 x 10-3 moles of
385
reactive Fe(II) in the 6-18 cm region compared to 10-13 moles of Tc), the sediments were less
386
reactive towards
387
Indeed, the
388
first 4 cm, as in the acetate stimulated experiment at 60 days (Figure 2). This amounts to
389
retention of approximately 3.8 x 10-15 mol g-1 Tc compared to approximately ~2.0 x 10-14 mol g-1
390
Tc in the 60 day acetate stimulated columns. This suggests that oxygen penetration led to
391
reoxidation of the most reactive Fe(II) species, thereby leading to a reduction in reactive Fe(II) in
392
the sediments.
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In treatment D, the column system where no further acetate was added between days 65 - 115, no
394
further Fe(II) was detected in the column effluent, whilst both nitrate and sulfate were present.
99m
Tc
99m
TcO4- when compared to the Fe(III)-reducing sediments imaged at 60 days.
99m
Tc spike was spread over 12 cm of the column rather than fully retained in the
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Sectioning and analysis of this column after 50 days showed that substantial re-oxidation had
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occurred and Fe(II) was present only in the uppermost sections of the column, between 10–18
397
cm (Figure 2; SI Table 1). As observed in the pulsed acetate column (treatment C), the remaining
398
Fe(II) showed lower reactivity towards
399
region rather than a tight, reactive band occurring. Approximately 80 % of the spike was retained
400
in the 11-18 cm zone on 75 g of sediment giving a concentration of ~ 4.0 x 10-15 mmol g-1 in the
401
partially reoxidised system. In addition, mass balance calculations showed ~ 20 % of the spike
402
had been transported out of the column and was not retained. The significant re-oxidation in the
403
sediment was presumably due to the oxygen in the influent synthetic groundwater that was
404
measured at ~ 0.2 mmol L-1 O2. This was consistent with expected dissolved oxygen saturation
405
levels at 20 °C, and was sufficient to reoxidise approximately 75 % of bioreduced Fe(II) in the
406
column after movement of 80 pore volumes of oxygenated water through the column.
407
In treatment E, the system where oxygenated synthetic groundwater was pumped into the column
408
from 65-115 days,
409
similar to that of the oxic column (Figure 2; SI Table 1). Here, constant aeration of the influent
410
synthetic groundwater resulted in a dissolved oxygen concentration measured at 0.31 mmol L-1
411
O2 (equivalent to dissolved oxygen saturation at 15 °C). Indeed, calculations showed that
412
complete reoxidation of the residual Fe(II) species was expected to occur after transport of 80
413
pore volumes of O2 saturated water through the columns. This was confirmed by analysis of the
414
sectioned core which showed the 0.5 N HCl extractable Fe in sediments after reaction was
415
present as Fe(III) with no detectable Fe(II). This presumably explained the lack of reactivity to
416
TcO4-(aq).
99m
Tc with a diffuse zone of retention in the 11-18 cm
99m
Tc was not retained on sediments and the Tc reactivity showed behavior
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Finally, in treatment F, elevated nitrate (10 mmol L-1) was added to the synthetic groundwater
418
(without added acetate) to explore the impact of high nitrate concentrations in groundwaters.
419
Here, it was hypothesized that column reoxidation may be expected to be accelerated by the
420
microbial reduction of nitrate coupled to the oxidation of Fe(II)
421
shown that for U(IV), intermediate species such as NO2- and Fe(III) from nitrate-dependent
422
microbial Fe(II) oxidation are key controls on reoxidation to U(VI) [3, 69]. However, in the current
423
study nitrate proved to be unreactive in the column and no transient nitrite was detected in
424
effluents. Overall, Column F behaved in a comparable way to treatment D, the low nitrate system
425
with a reoxidised zone developing rather slowly in the column. Indeed, analysis of the sectioned
426
column showed bioavailable Fe(II) was present in the upper 6 cm of the column (similar to the
427
low nitrate system). The similarity between Columns D and F, and the lack of nitrate utilisation
428
in these systems suggested that that elevated nitrate had no significant effect on Fe(II) oxidation
429
rates in these experiments and that reoxidation via O2 was the dominant process. Approximately
430
75 % of
431
behaviour to column D. It is possible that the presence of even low O2 in the influent
432
groundwater would inhibit nitrate-dependent Fe(II) oxidation, as many microorganisms
433
identified as able to couple Fe(II) oxidation to nitrate reduction do so under strict anaerobic
434
conditions [70].
[42, 63]
. Indeed, past work has
99m
Tc spike was retained within the upper 6 cm of column F, confirming comparable
435 436
Behaviour of strontium in column systems
437
Strontium was introduced continually into all columns in the synthetic groundwater at 12 µmol
438
L-1 and its retention was monitored by analysis of Sr2+ in column effluents (Figure 1F) and at the
439
experiment end-point by total acid digestion of the sediment followed by ICP-AES analysis. The
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pH in the oxic control remained steady at pH 7.2 throughout the experiment, and in other
441
columns was between 7.5 - 7.8 (Figure 1A). Effluent concentrations of Sr2+ trended upwards over
442
the duration of the experiment in all systems presumably as sediment Sr2+ sorption sites became
443
saturated, and with column B effluents showing the most significant Sr2+ retention over 115 days
444
(Figure 1F). Furthermore, experimental end point measurements of Sr in sediments by total acid
445
digestion (SI Table 4) showed enhanced Sr retention in column B (continuous acetate
446
amendment, 149 mg kg-1) compared to both the other columns and the background Sr
447
concentration of 102 mg kg-1 measured in the sediments. Here, the pH of the effluent was
448
amongst the highest of the column treatments (pH 7.7) and there was clear evidence for the
449
robust development of sulfate reducing conditions by the end of the experiment (Figure 1A, 1E).
450
Thermodynamic modelling of this system using an Eh of -240 mV (representative of typical
451
sulfate-reducing conditions), showed several Fe(II)-bearing mineral phases (siderite, magnetite,
452
and mackinawite) were modestly oversaturated, but undersaturation was predicted for SrCO3 (SI
453
Table 3). It is therefore probable that enhanced Sr2+ retention in this system was dominated by
454
sorption to either mineral phases and / or microbes [41-43, 71-72]. Finally, it should also be noted that
455
end point sediment total acid digests for columns A and C – F were all broadly consistent (91 ± 4
456
mg kg-1) with no Sr2+ enhancement above the initial concentration measured by XRF (102 mg
457
kg-1). Minor loss of Fe from the bioreducing columns was measurable in the effluents, most
458
notably when the columns had been standing for 5 days after initial acetate treatments (Figure
459
1D) and presumably due to reductive dissolution of Fe(III) minerals. However, this loss did not
460
appear to significantly affect Sr2+ sorption to the sediments (Figure 1F). Indeed, significant
461
biogeochemical perturbations involving different reduction and reoxidation cycles, appeared to
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have very little impact on the total Sr2+ retention over the four-month experiment and similar to
463
past work on static microcosm experiments using Sellafield sediments. [31]
464 465
Environmental Implications
466
Overall, these findings are important for understanding contaminant migration at nuclear “mega
467
sites” and the potential for in-situ bioreduction treatment of radionuclide releases to the
468
subsurface. In the absence of an added electron donor, oxic unstimulated sediment had a high
469
capacity for Sr sorption but was unreactive towards
470
reducing conditions can be achieved with the addition of 3 mmol L-1 acetate for less than 60 days
471
and that
472
demonstrates the potential for co-treatment of
473
where acetate was added constantly for 115 days (treatment B), increased Sr sorption capacity
474
was observed compared to the unamended control column. Whilst small-scale column studies do
475
not provide a substitute for full scale field testing,
476
dynamic sediment columns to be tested non-destructively after bioreduction and in post-
477
bioreduction treatments in complex heterogeneous and biogeochemically evolving sediment
478
columns. Visualizing
479
(treatment C), sediments became less reactive between pulses and enhanced Tc migration was
480
observed. When electron donor addition ceased (treatment D and E), reoxidation was significant
481
(> 75 % over 50 days), depending on the oxygen concentration of influent synthetic
482
groundwater. Here,
483
reoxidised sediments (treatment D). However, increased nitrate concentrations (10 mmol L-1,
99
Tc. Bioreduction experiments show that
99m
Tc was retained with no measurable loss in Sr sorption capacity. This clearly 99
Tc and
90
Sr via in-situ bioreduction. Moreover,
99m
Tc imaging allowed the reactivity of
99m
Tc transport in columns showed that when electron donor was pulsed
99m
Tc was only retained when Fe(II) was still partially present in the
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representative of some contaminant plumes at nuclear facilities) had little or no effect on
485
reoxidation rates in these experiments (treatment F). Indeed, high nitrate columns contained the
486
same proportion of Fe(II) after 50 days as low nitrate columns. Results highlight the ability of
487
carefully established column experiments to provide essential information which is crucial in
488
bridging the gap between laboratory batch experiments and field-scale testing and allow more
489
complex and potentially larger scale test systems to be developed. This information is directly
490
pertinent to the Sellafield nuclear facility in contaminated land management planning, and has
491
implications for other nuclear legacy sites where Tc and Sr are found as co-contaminants in
492
groundwater.
493 494
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ASSOCIATED CONTENT
496
Supporting Information. Tables and Figures showing additional geochemical and imaging
497
results are available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
498 499
Acknowledgements
500
This work was co-funded by Sellafield Ltd. and The University of Manchester EPSRC Impact
501
Acceleration Account. We thank Alastair Bewsher and Paul Lythgoe for help in data acquisition
502
and James Graham, National Nuclear Laboratories for helpful discussions on site groundwater
503
conditions.
504 505
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51. Lovley, D.R.; Phillips, E.J.P. Rapid assay for microbially reducible ferric iron in aquatic
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52. Wilkins, M.J.; Livens, F.R.; Vaughan, D.J.; Beadle, I.; Lloyd, J.R. The influence of
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microbial redox cycling on radionuclide mobility in the subsurface at a low-level
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radioactive waste storage site. Geobiol. 2007, 5, 293-301; DOI 10.1111/j.1472-
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sediments. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 1987, 53, 1536-1540.
53. Personal communication, Dr James Graham. NNL Research Fellow, Central Laboratory, Sellafield, Seascale, Cumbria, CA20 1PG.
[email protected] 54. Goto, K.; Taguchi, S.; Fukue, Y.; Ohta, K.; Watanabe, H. Spectrophotometric
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determination of manganese with 1-(2-pyridylazo)-2-naphthol and a non-ionic surfactant.
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56. Harris, S.J.; Mortimer, R.J.G. Determination of nitrate in small water samples by the
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cadmium-copper reduction method: A manual technique with application to the
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interstitial waters of marine sediments. Inter. J. Environ. Anal. Chem. 2002, 82, 369-376;
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57. Winkler, L.W. Berichte der Deutschen Chemischen Gesellechaft, 1888, 21, 2843.
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58. Tessier, A.; Campbell, P.G.C.; Bisson, M. Sequential extraction procedure for the
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speciation of particulate trace metals. Anal. Chem. 1979, 51, 884-851; DOI
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59. Keith-Roach, M.J.; Morris, K.; Dahlgaard, H. An investigation into technetium binding in
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60. Aarkrog, A.; Carlsson, L.; Chen, Q.J.; Dahlgaard, H.; Holm, E.; Huynh-Ngoc, L.; Jensen,
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L.H.; Nielsen, S.P.; Nies, H. Origin of technetium-99 and its use as a marine tracer.
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solutions of convection-dispersion equation. U.S. Salinity laboratory agricultural research
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62. Newsome, L; Morris, K; Trivedi, D; Atherton, N; Lloyd, J.R. Microbial reduction of
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63. Hubbard, C. G.; West, L. J.; Morris, K.; Kulessa, B.; Brookshaw, D.; Lloyd, J. R.; Shaw,
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S., In search of experimental evidence for the biogeobattery. J. Geophys. Res.: Biogeosci.
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64. Hess, N.J.; Xia, Y.X.; Rai, D.; Conradson, S.D. Thermodynamic model for the solubility
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of TcO2.xH2O(am) in the aqueous Tc(IV)-Na+-Cl−-H+-OH−- H2O system. J. Sol. Chem.
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65. Dodd, J.; Large, D.J.; Fortey, N.J.; Milodowski, A.E.; Kemp, S. A petrographic
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investigation of two sequential extraction techniques applied to anaerobic canal bed mud.
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66. Torres, E.; Auleda, M. A sequential extraction procedure for sediments affected by acid
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mine drainage. J. Geochem. Explor. 2013. 128, 35-41; DOI
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67. Liu, Y.; Terry, J.; Jurisson, S. Pertechnetate immobilization with amorphous iron sulfide. Radiochim. Acta. 2008, 96, 823–833; DOI 10.1524/ract.2008.1528. 68. Lee, J.; Zachara, J.M.; Fredrickson, J.K.; Heald, S.M.; McKinley, J.P.; Plymale, A.E.;
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Resch, C.T.; Moore, D.A. Fe(II)- and sulfide-facilitated reduction of 99Tc(VII)O4- in
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Characterization of microbial activities and U reduction in a shallow aquifer
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contaminated by uranium mill tailings. J. Microb. Ecol. 2003, 46, 83-91; DOI
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71. Faison, B.S.; Cancel, C.A.; Lewis, S.N.; Adler, H.I. Binding of dissolved strontium by
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Figure 1. Composition of column effluents over 115 days (data collection was paused between
742
60–65 days to allow radiological decay of 99mTc before experiments could restart). Graphs show
743
A) pH, B) acetate, C) nitrate, D) Fe(II), E) sulfate, and F) strontium values and/or concentrations
744
in effluents. Influent acetate was 3 mmol L-1 for columns B-F for days 0-60. Further acetate was
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continually added at 3 mmol L-1 to column B between 65-115 days, and in pulsed amendments to
746
column C between 80-85 days and 100-105 days. Influent nitrate was 10 mmol L-1 for column F
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from 65-115 days and was added continually at 0.3 mmol L-1 for all other columns. Influent
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sulfate was 0.4 mmol L-1 throughout the experiment for all columns.
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Figure 2: Panel I: Gamma camera images of columns at 60 days. Images are at end-point
751
samples (12 hours after introduction of
752
synthetic groundwater had passed through the column. The images show: (A)99mTc spike at the
753
uppermost sections of the unamended control column; and (B-F) 99mTc immobilized in the lower
754
2 cm of sediment in the columns w hich had been amended with 3 mmol L-1 acetate for 60 days
755
(Note: the lowest 2cm section of the column consisted of glass wool and quartz sand packing to
756
improve flow dynamics the next 2 – 4 cm section contained the bottom of the sediment column).
757
Panel II: 99mTc images at the 115 day time point. Images are at end-point samples (10 hours after
758
the introduction of the
759
had passed through the columns which were: (A) the non-acetate amended groundwater system
760
representing a natural attenuation control; (B) the system with continual acetate additions; (C) a
761
bioreduced system where acetate was then pulsed (15 days no acetate additions, 5 days acetate
762
additions); (D) a bioreduced system with no further acetate additions; (E) a bioreduced system
763
where air was then bubbled into the synthetic groundwater (0.31 mM O2); and (F) a bioreduced
764
system where nitrate was then added at elevated levels. The data are co-plotted with the
765
percentage distribution of the
766
sections and the % 0.5 N HCl extractable Fe present as Fe(II) (blue triangles) plotted at the
767
bottom of the 2 cm sections sampled.
99m
Tc) and after approximately 1.2 pore volumes of
99m
Tc) and after approximately 1 pore volumes of synthetic groundwater
99m
Tc spike (black squares) calculated for the mid-point of 2 cm
768
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Table 1. Experimental details. Column
Continuous Sr2+ addition
A
12 µmol L-1
B
Input 0-60 days
61-65 days
Input 65-115 days
No acetate amendment
99m
No acetate amendment
12 µmol L-1
3 mmol L-1 acetate
99m
3 mmol L-1 acetate
C
12 µmol L-1
3 mmol L-1 acetate
99m
3 mmol L-1 acetate in 5 day pulses every 20 days
D
12 µmol L-1
3 mmol L-1 acetate
99m
No further amendment, 0.3 mmol L-1 nitrate, 0.25 mmol L-1 oxygen
E
12 µmol L-1
3 mmol L-1 acetate
99m
No further amendment, 0.3 mmol L-1 nitrate, oxygen purged influent (0.31 mmol L-1)
F
12 µmol L-1
3 mmol L-1 acetate
99m
No further amendment, 10 mmol L-1 nitrate, 0.25 mmol L-1 oxygen
Tc decay Tc decay Tc decay Tc decay Tc decay Tc decay
770 771 772
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Figure 1 254x239mm (96 x 96 DPI)
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Figure 2 190x275mm (96 x 96 DPI)
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254x190mm (96 x 96 DPI)
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