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Silicate Binding and Precipitation on Iron Oxyhydroxides Masakazu Kanematsu, Glenn Waychunas, and Jean-François Boily Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b04098 • Publication Date (Web): 05 Jan 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on January 5, 2018
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Silicate Binding and Precipitation on Iron Oxyhydroxides
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Masakazu Kanematsu 1, 2, Glenn A. Waychunas 1, Jean-François Boily 2,*
3 4
1
5
Berkeley, CA 94720, U.S.A.
6
2
Energy Geosciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, One Cyclotron Road,
Department of Chemistry, Umeå University, SE-901 87 Umeå, Sweden
7 8
*corresponding author. + 46 73 833 2678;
[email protected] 9 10 11 12
Submitted to Environmental Science & Technology
13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
August 9, 2017.
22
In revised form on October 26, 2017
23
In 2nd revised form, on December 28nd, 2017
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Abstract
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Silica-bearing waters in nature often alter the reactivity of mineral surfaces via deposition
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of Si complexes and solids. In this work, Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy was
27
used to identify hydroxo groups at goethite (α-FeOOH) and lepidocrocite (γ-FeOOH) surfaces
28
that are targeted by ligand exchange reactions with monomeric silicate species. Measurements of
29
samples first reacted in aqueous solutions then dried under N2(g) enabled resolution of the
30
signature O-H stretching bands of singly (−OH), doubly- (µ-OH) and triply-coordinated (µ3-OH).
31
Samples reacted with Si for 3 and 30 d at pH 4 and 7 revealed that –OH groups were
32
preferentially exchanged by silicate, and that µ-OH and µ3-OH groups were not exchanged.
33
Based on knowledge of the disposition of –OH groups on the major crystallographic faces of
34
goethite and lepidocrocite, and the response of these groups to ligand exchange prior
35
oligomerization, our work points to the predominance of rows of mononuclear monodentate
36
silicate species, each separated by at least one –OH group. These species are the attachment sites
37
from which oligomerization and polymerization reactions occur, starting at loadings exceeding
38
~1 Si/nm2. Only above such loadings can reaction products grow away from rows of –OH groups
39
and form hydrogen bonds with non-exchangeable µ-OH and µ3-OH groups. This can occur in
40
systems with soluble Si concentrations as low as ~0.7 mM after 30-d reaction time. These
41
findings have important repercussions for our understanding of the fate of waterborne silicate
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ions exposed to minerals.
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. Keywords: silicate; iron oxyhydroxide; adsorption; oligomerization; polymerization.
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1. Introduction
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Iron (oxyhydr)oxides are of common occurrence in nature, and play key roles in
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environmental processes, primarily through metal or anion adsorption and interfacial electron
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transfer processes.1, 2 Adsorption of silicate ions is particularly relevant to aquatic and terrestrial
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environments, where (submillimolar) dissolved silica concentrations can vary with pH and
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mineral composition.3, 4 Silicates form mineral-bound molecular complexes and polymeric gels
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that profoundly affect interfacial reactions involved in the biogeochemical cycling of elements in
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nature.5-7,8,
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understanding of the mechanism through which silicate ions bind and precipitate at mineral
57
surfaces.
9
Accounting for the impact that Si plays in this context has long called for an
58 59
Previous studies9-12 dedicated to this important issue have helped constrain ideas on
60
reaction mechanisms and timescales of mineral-silicate interactions.7, 8, 13-16 Swedlund et al.8, 17
61
and Waychunas et al.16 have, for instance, addressed the potential roles that steric constraints
62
play on Si binding at crystallographically oriented surfaces. The appeal for this approach lies in
63
rationalizing Si binding in terms of the known two-dimensional disposition of OH groups
64
available for ligand exchange. This approach becomes particularly powerful when working with
65
surfaces of contrasting orientations, and distinct populations of (hydr)oxo groups.
66 67
Recent work in our group developed possibilities for addressing this question by
68
monitoring populations of hydroxo groups on goethite (GT; α-FeOOH), rod-shaped
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lepidocrocite (RL; γ-FeOOH)) and lath-shaped lepidocrocite (LL; γ-FeOOH)) nanoparticles of
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contrasting structures and crystal habits (Figs. 1, S1, S2). These groups, which can be singly (–
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OH), doubly (µ-OH), and triply (µ3-OH) coordinated with underlying Fe atoms,18,
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distinct distributions on the dominant crystallographic faces of GT, RL and LL particles (Fig. 1,
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Table S1). Our approach, which tracks the vibration spectroscopic response of these OH groups,
74
is used to identify reactive binding sites, and in many cases, even the crystallographic faces on
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which reactions occur. This approach therefore offers new ideas for understanding Si binding
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and polymerization on minerals, adding to previous work in this area.7, 8, 14, 15
19
have
77 78
To this end, this work was focused on GT, RL and LL particles, for which the vibrational
79
spectra of surface hydroxo groups are well-understood (Figs. 1, S1, S2 and Table S1).19-22
80
Following an approach we have previously developed, we first reacted LL, RL and GT with
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solutions of silicate in aqueous solutions.18-20 We thereafter tracked the reacted sites in dried
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samples. Drying was necessary to remove water which otherwise overwhelms the vibration
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spectroscopic responses of surface hydroxo groups. This strategy consequently opens the
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possibility for identifying Si surface complexes in water-unsaturated media, such as in the
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vadose zones of sediments, Earth’s atmosphere, planetary surfaces, and even in technological
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settings. In this study, we show that –OH groups are the sole ligand exchange sites for silica at
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iron oxyhydroxide surfaces, and therefore the primary attachment sites from which
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oligomerization and polymerization reactions occur. We also suggest that monomeric
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monodendate Si complexes are predominantly organized along rows of –OH groups on the
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dominant crystallographic faces of the nanoparticles under study.
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2. Methods
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2.1 Batch adsorption experiments
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Details on the methods of synthesis, preparation and characterization of LL, RL and GT
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can be found in the Supplementary Information (SI; Figs. S1, S2, Table S1) section, as well as in
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previous studies from our group.23-25 Stock solution of silicic acid (0.2, 0.4, 0.6, 0.8, 1.0, 1.5, 2.0,
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4.0 and 6.0 mM) were freshly prepared by dissolution of trimethyl orthosilicate (TMOS) in
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vigorously stirred Milli-Q water at pH 2.26 This strategy was beneficial for minimizing risk of
101
oligomerization/polymerization in the aqueous solutions, and therefore chiefly limiting this study
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to the case of the adsorption of monomeric silicate species. The absence of solution polymer was
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confirmed by the lack of Si-O stretching bands indicative of oligomerization and polymerization,
104
evaluated by Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectra of the stock solutions. Only the solutions
105
with Si concentrations exceeding ~2.0 mM may possibly have formed polymers during the
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course of adsorption experiments.
107 108
All Si adsorption experiments were conducted in the absence of background electrolyte
109
ions, and under an atmosphere of humidified N2(g). This minimized any competitive adsorption
110
reactions that would occur under dry conditions. Still, because counterions were present in the
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form of unadsorbed Si and of titrants (HCl, NaOH), adsorption reactions were conducted under
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conditions of low but positively-charged surfaces (iep=7.7 for RL and LL; iep=9.4 for G),
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namely at pH 4 and 7. Reactions were initiated by mixing 5 mL suspensions of FeOOH (400
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m2/L) to 5 mL of Si stock solutions, and by adjusting pH values to 4.0 and 7.0 by addition of
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small volumes of 1.0 M HCl or NaOH. The suspensions were then equilibrated on an end-to-end
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rotator for up to 30 d in a room kept at 298 ± 1 K during which samples were collected to
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monitor Si uptake kinetics. Suspensions were then monitored for pH, centrifuged (~2000 g for
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30 min) and the supernatants analyzed for residual silicic acid concentrations. The centrifuged
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mineral pastes were analyzed by FTIR as described in Section 2.3.
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Determination of silicic acid content in the supernatants was carried out with the
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molybdenum blue spectrophotometric method for the kinetic adsorption experiments, and by
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Inductively Coupled Plasma/Optical Emission Spectrometry (ICP-OES) for adsorption isotherm
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experiments. In the spectrophotometric method, reagents (Si-bearing standards and samples
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mixed with ammonium molybdate, hydrochloric acid, oxalic acid, ascorbic acid solution and
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acetone) were stirred, then reacted for 10 min prior to absorbance measurements with a uv-vis
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spectrophotometer (Shimadzu UV-2100). Spectra over the entire 190-800 nm region were
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monitored but the absorbances at 650 nm ± 10 nm were taken to evaluate total Si concentrations.
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The measurement error of this method was no more than 3%. Total dissolved Si concentrations
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in a 1% HNO3 matrix were determined by ICP-OES (Perkin Elmer, Optima 5300 DV), with a
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detection limit of ~12 ppb.
132 133
2.3 FTIR Spectroscopy
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Aliquots (10-20 µL) centrifuged wet pastes of the mineral suspensions were applied onto
135
an Attenuated Total Reflectance (ATR) cell using a spatula (Golden Gate, single-bounce
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diamond cell), then dried under N2(g) in the analytical chamber of a FTIR spectrometer (Bruker
137
Vertex 70/V FTIR) in a room kept at 298 ± 1 K. Measurements were carried out in the 600-4500
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cm-1 range at a resolution of 4.0 cm-1 and a forward/reverse scanning rate of 10 Hz, resulting in
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1000 co-added spectra for each sample. A DLaTGS detector was used for these measurements,
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and the Blackman-Harris 3-term apodization function was used to correct phase resolution.
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Spectra were collected every 0.5 h during water evaporation until all O-H stretching and bending
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modes of free water disappeared. The spectra of the resulting dried samples were then used to
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identify the surface OH groups exchanged by silicate binding.
144 145
2.4 Molecular Dynamics
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Simulations of the (110) face of goethite (Pbnm spacegroup) and the (100) face of
147
lepidocrocite were carried out to study the impact of Si binding on the hydrogen bonding
148
environments of surface hydroxo groups. Classical molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of this
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face were carried out with the CLAYFF 27 force field for bulk oxygen and hydroxyls, the revised
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CLAYFF parameters
151
details on the simulation approach, and Table S2 for parameters). The simulation cell was
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generated using program METADISE30 with the crystallographic parameters of Wyckoff 31, and
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chosen based on the terminations with the smallest energies and dipole moments. Dangling
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surface bonds were then saturated with surface oxygens (Os) or protons, where applicable.
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Charge-neutral
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Fe792O660(OH)660(OsH)264(Os)66 for goethite and Fe960O840(OH)840(OsH)180 for lepidocrocite, with
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slabs separated by a 8 nm thick void. Simulations were limited to Fe-bound H3SiO41- molecules
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each replacing a –OH group in the form of a mononuclear monodentate complex. This choice
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was guided from the experimental data of this study suggesting that up to ~2/3 of –OH groups on
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rows of –OH groups can be ligand-exchanged at loadings of 2 Si/nm2. More details of the
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simulations strategy, and analyses of the production runs, can be found in the SI.
28
slabs
for bulk Fe3+, and the Heinz et al.
were
∼3
nm
thick
and
29
parameters for H3SiO41- (cf. SI for
initially
had
the
composition
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3. Results & Discussions
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Time-resolved adsorption experiments of Si on LL, RL and GT (Fig. S3) revealed rapid
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uptake of Si over the first 3-5 d of reaction time. This was followed by substantially slower
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binding rates over ~25 d without full attainment of thermodynamic equilibrium. Because the
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experiments involved freshly-made Si solutions below ~2 mM from TMOS we exclude the
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possibility that polymerized solution species are present, and hence that polymer adsorption and
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considerations for entropically-driven32 adsorption are not required to explain these results.
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Adsorption isotherms at 3 and 30 d reaction time (Fig. 2; cf. Fig. S4 for data and model in log-
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log plot) are all of IUPAC33 type IV, and consist of (i) an adsorption/oligomerization regime
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reaching a Langmuirian maximum mostly at ~2 sites·nm-2, and of (ii) a more variable
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polymerization/precipitation regime favored by increased reaction time. The results also show
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that greater loadings achieved at pH 7 are driven by polymerization/precipitation.
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The concentration fields of these two regimes were tentatively resolved by the following
176 177
model: ΓSi =Γads
178
൫K ads ∙ൣSiaq ൧൯
m
1+൫K ads ∙ൣSiaq ൧൯
m
+K poly ൫ൣSiaq ൧൯
n
(1)
179
In this equation, soluble Si concentrations ([Siaq]) were used to predict Si surface loadings (ΓSi)
180
in terms of (i) adsorption reactions (left-hand term: Langmuir-Freunlich isotherm with total site
181
density
182
polymerization/precipitation reactions (right-hand term: Freundlich isotherm with constant Kpoly
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and non-ideality factor n). The resulting model (Table S3) suggests that no significant
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polymerization/precipitation occurs below at least ~1.5-2.0 Si/nm2, with soluble Si levels as low
of
Γads,
adsorption
constant
Kads
and
non-ideality
factor
m),
and
(ii)
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as ~1 mM for 3 d and ~0.7 mM for 30 d reaction time. The adsorption regime can be adequately
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predicted using representative crystallographic site densities of –OH groups on all faces of the
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particles under study (Table S1): namely 3.30 –OH/nm2 in GT, 2.99 –OH/nm2 in RL and 2.65 –
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OH/nm2 in LL. Only the data for LL particles at pH 7 required larger values because of
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polymerization/precipitations reactions; here we used a proxy density value of ~6 –OH/nm2. All
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Si binding data and the accompanying model provide the macroscopic basis upon which the
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nature of Si binding can be described using FTIR spectroscopy.
192 193
Building upon these results, the O-H stretching region was used to identify hydroxo
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groups targeted by Si binding. Sites resolvable by FTIR are those that are isolated, weakly
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hydrogen-bonded or involved in a homogeneous network of hydrogen bonds (Figs. 3 and S5-S7;
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Table S1). On GT, these include –OH sites (3661 cm-1) of the (110) face, representing ~82% of
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all –OH sites, and present along rows (O-O distance of ~3 Å) in which ~50% form hydrogen
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bonds with one another (Fig. 1).19 In contrast, –OH sites of the (021) face are not resolvable as
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distinct bands as they are involved in a complex network of hydrogen bonds (Fig. S1).19
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Resolvable sites of GT also include µ3II-OH (3490 cm-1) of the (110) face, which form a
201
hydrogen bond with one overlying –OH group.21 On RL and LL, resolvable –OH groups (3667
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cm-1) are those of the (001) face, and represent ~62 % of these groups. As on the (110) face of
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GT, these groups are also exposed along rows but in which only ~15% form hydrogen bonds
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with one another.19 This difference arises from the lack of a hydrogen bond with a neighboring
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µ3-OH group. The remaining –OH groups of RL and LL cannot be resolved, and are present as
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chemisorbed waters (η–OH2) on the (100) face, and as defects (~0.9 site/nm2) on the (010)
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face.34 Additional resolvable groups on RL and LL include µ-OH of the (010) face (3626 cm-1),
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and µ3-OH groups (3534 and 3552 cm-1) of the (100) face (Figs. 1, S1).
209
Band intensities and frequencies of resolvable groups were systematically affected by
210
variations in Si loadings (Fig. 3 for pH 7 data for 3 d reaction time; cf. Figs. S5-S7 for all data).
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Bands of –OH in LL and RL (3667 cm-1) and GT (3661 cm-1) all underwent considerably
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stronger changes than those of the less exchangeable µ-OH and µ3-OH groups. Most notably, Si
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binding in the first Si/nm2 ligand-exchanged ~40-60% of the detectable –OH sites by FTIR,
214
while binding at ~1-2 Si/nm2 involved considerably less exchange (Fig. 4a). These data can
215
consequently be used to suggest that:
216
(i)
ligand exchange predominates at < 1 Si/nm2;
217
(ii)
Si binding at ~1-2 Si/nm2 is driven by oligomerization onto pre-existing monomeric Si
218
species, followed by polymerization/precipitation reactions requiring no or little
219
consumption of –OH groups;
220 221
(iii)
Growth of the polymer at > ~2 Si/nm2 consumes the remaining –OH groups and/or alters their hydrogen bonding environments.
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In accordance with these observations, the appearance of silanols (e.g. Fe-O-Si-(OH)3) — seen
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in O-H stretching bands at 3720 (hydrogen-bonded) and 3740 (isolated) cm-1 (Figs. 3, 4b)35 —
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correlates with the steep losses in intensities of –OH bands ~1 Si/nm2 (Fig. 4a). Above these
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loadings, the appearance of silanols has a weaker dependence on Si loadings (Fig. 4b), an
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observation that is consistent with the concept of increased amounts of Si-O-Si linkages. The
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appearance of the latter can be appreciated in the Si-O stretching region (Fig. S8) in the form of
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polymeric species (~1062 and 1123-1130 cm-1)7, 8 at Si loadings exceeding 1.8 Si/nm2 at 3d and
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1.1 Si/nm2 at 30 d. Less clear from the Si-O stretching region is the possible concomitant
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appearance of oligomeric species (~985-993cm-1). Finally, monomeric ( 2 Si/nm2 at 30 d reaction time in Figs. S6 & S7), Si
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complexes may have possibly begun forming hydrogen bonds with µ3-OH sites in a similar
250
manner described for the (010) face of LL and RL. Additionally, we stress that a blue-shift of
251
the 3490 cm-1 band of GT to ~3560 cm-1 was not the result of ligand exchange of µ3,II-OH but
252
rather of the rupture or weakening of the original intersite µ3,II-OH ⋅⋅⋅OH− hydrogen bond (Fig.
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1) resulting from −OH/silicate exchange. The sensitivity of this band to protonation and ligand
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exchange was demonstrated in previous studies from our group.19-20,25
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Si binding mechanisms
257
Combining the information gained from the adsorption isotherms and vibration
258
spectroscopy, we draw the following suggestions on Si binding and precipitation mechanisms at
259
iron oxyhydroxide surfaces. First, the O-H stretching region provides evidence that (i) Si
260
binding targets only –OH groups, and that (ii) ~40-60% of the –OH groups that can be detected
261
by vibration spectroscopy remain unexchanged at the Langmuirian maxima (~2 sites/nm2 in Fig.
262
4). Thus, even if Si would have been selectively bound by all the (FTIR-silent) sites of the
263
terminations of the particles (e.g. 0.6/nm2 on (021) of GT, and 0.5-1.0/nm2 on (100) of RL; Table
264
S1) we evaluate that a minimum of 1.0-1.5 Si/nm2 must be bound to ~3 –OH/nm2 of the
265
dominant faces. Because bidendate (e.g. (≡Fe-O)2-SiO2 or ≡Fe-O2-SiO2) complexation would
266
require ligand exchange with the majority of these sites, it cannot explain the levels of
267
unexchanged –OH densities at the Si Langmuirian maxima (Fig. 4). Even a density of 1.0 Si/nm2
268
on these faces would ideally leave one intervening –OH group between each bound Si (e.g. [-OH
269
–OSiO3Hp –OH]) if a monomeric monodentate species prevailed. This view also falls in line
270
with related accounts on arsenate36 and phosphate18 binding on the same type of rows of –OH
271
groups, and where steric constraints have been argued in favor for monomeric monodendate
272
species. We must also highlight that other studies37,
273
monodentate and bidentate species, the relative occurrences of which are affected by surface
274
loadings and pH.
38
have also pointed to coexisting
275
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Further evidence supporting the prevalence of mononuclear monodendate Si in the
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systems considered in this work can be observed through the impact of such complexes on the
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hydrogen bonding network developed at mineral surfaces. In GT, this can be observed through
279
the splitting of the original 3661 cm-1 band to a triplet at 3651, 3661 and 3670 cm-1 to loadings
280
up to ~2 Si/nm2 (Figs. 3, 5, S9). MD simulations (Fig. S10, (110) face of GT with 0.6 Si/nm2)
281
suggest that this triplet originates from the breakdown of a hydrogen bonding network initially
282
involving 50% of –OH groups (–OH···–OH) to populations as low as 10 %. In contrast to GT, Si
283
binding on the RL/LL induces a simpler response, with its original 3667 cm-1 band shifting to
284
~3655 cm-1. Consistent with this observation, MD simulations (Fig. S10) suggest that this
285
simpler response can be explained by the smaller populations of intersite hydrogen bonding (Fig.
286
1), lying at ~10-20 % irrespective of Si loading. Fig. 6 shows a tentative band assignment for
287
each of these contrasting hydrogen bond strengths. It also includes plausible hydrogen bonding
288
environments for isolated (3740 cm-1) and hydrogen bonding (3720 cm-1) silanols. MD suggests
289
that the latter are responsible for 2-2.5 H-bonds/Si on GT (Fig. S10).
290 291
Once the prevailing monodentate complex has achieved loadings exceeding ~1-2 Si/nm2,
292
oligomerization/precipitation of additional Si species can proceed via the formation of new Si-O-
293
Si linkages with Fe-bound Si. The appearance of these linkages can be seen through the
294
appearance of bands at ~1062 and 1123-1130 cm-1 (Fig. S8). These additional species tend to
295
appear at conditions corresponding to the precipitation edges of the adsorption isotherms (Fig. 2).
296
Only at this stage are oligomerization/polymerization reactions no longer directional (Fig. 1),
297
thus allowing reaction products to expand laterally from rows of the type [-OH –OSiO3Hp –OH –
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OSiO3Hp] over areas populated by non-exchangeable µ-OH and µ3-OH sites. Only then would
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band intensities of these two latter groups be attenuated via hydrogen bonding with the newly-
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grown oligomeric/polymeric species. This concept could, as such, represent an extension of
301
previous ideas by Swedlund et al.17, 39, except that oligomeric/polymeric units first grow along
302
rows of –OH groups then laterally over the entire surface.
303 304
Based on these inferences, we expect that silicate monomers are likely to sorb differently
305
at mineral surfaces with dissimilar arrangements of exchangeable –OH groups. For example, if
306
exchangeable –OH groups are relatively sparse, the only way for much silicate to bind to the
307
surface will be via formation of silicate polymers attached by single surface Fe-O-Si bonds. At
308
the other extreme, where there are high densities of exchangeable hydroxyls, the precise distance
309
between such hydroxyls may favor bidentate attachment over monodentate attachment initially.
310
Examples on iron oxyhydroxides may possibly include particle terminations exposing pairs of
311
OH groups at equatorial edges of Fe, or at defects. Differences in the density and disposition of –
312
OH groups would also directly impact the onset of oligomerization/polymerization reactions.
313
These possibilities would need to be explored by further analysis, notably by X-ray absorption
314
spectroscopy, and by detailed exploration of sorption clusters with varying protonation states by
315
molecular modelling.
316 317
Molecular resolution of adsorption and oligomerization/polymerization reactions made in
318
this study has several implications in our appreciation of Si complex formation in soils and
319
aquatic environments. These findings necessarily imply that drying of soils would produce
320
silicate attachment sites facilitating polymerization at mineral surfaces. Long-term exposure of Si
321
to surfaces effectively produces substantial coverage of reactive surface sites with silicate
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monomer and/or polymers. This can occur even at soluble Si concentrations as low as ~0.7 mM,
323
and therefore below the solubility limit of amorphous SiO2 under acidic to circumneutral
324
conditions. As polymerized silicate complexation would be difficult to desorb or dissolve, there
325
would necessarily be a large alteration in reactivity, for example with respect to contaminant and
326
nutrient transformation and transport in aquatic environments. Having noted these implications,
327
this study consequently calls for renewed efforts by the research community to improve our
328
understanding of the interfacial phenomena and structure driving the reactivity of Si-coated
329
mineral surfaces.
330 331
Acknowledgements
332
This research was supported by the Swedish Research Council (2016-03808) to J.-F. B,
333
and by a JSPS Postdoctoral Fellowships for Research Abroad to M.K. G.A.W. acknowledges
334
support from the Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences of the U.S. Department of
335
Energy (BES-DOE) under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231. We appreciate the technical
336
support from Kenichi Shimizu, Xiaowei Song, and Solomon Tesfalidet during the course of this
337
work.
338 339
Supporting information available
340
Description of mineral synthesis and characterization as well as MD simulations; Si binding
341
modeling constants; Physical properties of FeOOH particles, including surface structure and
342
imaging; Si adsorption kinetics; ATR-FTIR spectra of the Si-O stretching region in Si-reacted
343
GT; Narrow O-H stretching region; MD-derived hydrogen bonding populations.
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References
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2. Brown, G. E.; Henrich, V. E.; Casey, W. H.; Clark, D. L.; Eggleston, C.; Felmy, A.; Goodman, D. W.; Gratzel, M.; Maciel, G.; McCarthy, M. I.; Nealson, K. H.; Sverjensky, D. A.; Toney, M. F.; Zachara, J. M., Metal oxide surfaces and their interactions with aqueous solutions and microbial organisms. Chem. Rev. 1999, 99, (1), 77-174.
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3. McKeague, J. A.; Cline, M. G., Silica in soil solutions. I. The form and concentration of dissolved silica in aqueous extracts of some soils. Can. J. Soil. Sci. 1963, 43, (1), 70-82.
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4. Alvarez, R.; Sparks, D. L., Polymerization of silicate anions in solutions at low concentrations. Nature 1985, 318, (6047), 649-651.
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5. Vempati, R. K.; Loeppert, R. H., Influence of structural and adsorbed Si on the transformation of synthetic ferrihydrite. Clays Clay Min. 1989, 37, (3), 273-279.
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6. Cismasu, A. C.; Michel, F. M.; Tcaciuc, A. P.; Brown Jr, G. E., Properties of impuritybearing ferrihydrite III. Effects of Si on the structure of 2-line ferrihydrite. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 2014, 133, 168-185.
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7. Swedlund, P. J.; Miskelly, G. M.; McQuillan, A. J., An attenuated total reflectance IR study of silicic acid adsorbed onto a ferric oxyhydroxide surface. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 2009, 73, (14), 4199-4214.
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8. Swedlund, P. J.; Miskelly, G. M.; McQuillan, A. J., Silicic acid adsorption and oligomerization at the ferrihydrite-water interface: interpretation of ATR-IR spectra based on a model surface structure. Langmuir 2010, 26, (5), 3394-401.
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9. Waltham, C. A.; Eick, M. J., Kinetics of arsenic adsorption on goethite in the presence of sorbed silicic acid. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 2002, 66, (3), 818-825.
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10. Meng, X. G.; Bang, S.; Korfiatis, G. P., Effects of silicate, sulfate, and carbonate on arsenic removal by ferric chloride. Water Res. 2000, 34, (4), 1255-1261.
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11. Davis, C. C.; Chen, H. W.; Edwards, M., Modeling silica sorption to iron hydroxide. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2002, 36, (4), 582-587.
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12. Christl, I.; Brechbuehl, Y.; Graf, M.; Kretzschmar, R., Polymerization of Silicate on Hematite Surfaces and Its Influence on Arsenic Sorption. Environ. Sci. Technol. 2012, 46, (24), 13235-13243.
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13. Pokrovski, G. S.; Schott, J.; Garges, F.; Hazemann, J. L., Iron (III)-silica interactions in aqueous solution: Insights from X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 2003, 67, (19), 3559-3573.
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14. Song, Y. T.; Swedlund, P. J.; McIntosh, G. J.; Cowie, B. C. C.; Waterhouse, G. I. N.; Metson, J. B., The Influence of Surface Structure on H4SiO4 Oligomerization on Rutile and Amorphous TiO2 Surfaces: An ATR-IR and Synchrotron XPS Study. Langmuir 2012, 28, (49), 16890-16899.
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15. Ferras, Y.; Robertson, J.; Swedlund, P. J., The Application of Raman Spectroscopy to Probe the Association of H4SiO4 with Iron Oxides. Aquatic Geochemistry 2017, 23, (1), 21-31.
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16. Waychunas, G.; Jun, Y.-S.; Eng, S.; Trainor, T. P., Anion sorption topology on hematite: Comparison of arsente and silicate. . In Adsorption of Metals by Geomedia II, Barnett, M. O.; Kent, D., Eds. 2008; pp 31-66.
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17. Swedlund, P. J.; Hamid, R. D.; Miskelly, G. M., Insights into H4SiO4 surface chemistry on ferrihydrite suspensions from ATR-IR, Diffuse Layer Modeling and the adsorption enhancing effects of carbonate. J. Colloid Interface Sci. 2010, 352, (1), 149-157.
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18. Ding, X.; Song, X.; Boily, J.-F., Identification of fluoride and phosphate binding sites at FeOOH surfaces. J. Phys. Chem. C 2012, 116, (41), 21939-21947.
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19. Song, X. W.; Boily, J. F., Structural controls on OH site availability and reactivity at iron oxyhydroxide particle surfaces. Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 2012, 14, (8), 2579-2586.
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20. Song, X.; Boily, J.-F., Surface Hydroxyl Identity and Reactivity in Akaganeite. Journal of Physical Chemistry C 2011, 115, (34), 17036-17045.
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21. Rustad, J. R.; Boily, J. F., Density functional calculation of the infrared spectrum of surface hydroxyl groups on goethite (alpha-FeOOH). Am. Mineral. 2010, 95, (2-3), 414-417.
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22. Ding, X.; Song, X.; Boily, J.-F., Identification of fluoride and phosphate binding sites at FeOOH surfaces. Journal of Physical Chemistry C 2012, 116, (41), 21939-21947.
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23. Lewis, D. G.; Farmer, V. C., Infrared adsorption of surface hydroxyl-groups and lattice vibrations in lepidocrocite (g-FeOOH) and boehmite (g-AlOOH). Clay Min. 1986, 21, (1), 93100.
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24. Schwertmann, U.; Cornell, R. M., Iron oxides in the laboratory : Preparation and characterization. 2nd completely rev. and extended ed.; Wiley-VCH: Weinheim ; New York, 2000; p xviii, 188.
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25. Boily, J.-F.; Felmy, A. R., On the protonation of oxo- and hydroxo-groups of the goethite (α-FeOOH) surface: A FTIR spectroscopic investigation of surface O-H stretching vibrations. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 2008, 72, (14), 3338-3357.
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26. Brinker, C. J., Hydrolysis and condensation of silicates: Effects on structure. J. Non-Cryst. Sol. 1988, 100, 31-50.
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27. Cygan, R. T.; Liang, J. J.; Kalinichev, A. G., Molecular models of hydroxide, oxyhydroxide, and clay phases and the development of a general force field. J. Phys. Chem. B 2004, 108, (4), 1255-1266.
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28. Kerisit, S., Water structure at hematite–water interfaces. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 2011, 75, (8), 2043-2061.
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29. Heinz, H.; Lin, T. J.; Mishra, R. K.; Emami, F. S., Thermodynamically Consistent Force Fields for the Assembly of Inorganic, Organic, and Biological Nanostructures: The INTERFACE Force Field. Langmuir 2013, 29, (6), 1754-1765.
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30. Watson, G. W.; Kelsey, E. T.; deLeeuw, N. H.; Harris, D. J.; Parker, S. C., Atomistic simulation of dislocations, surfaces and interfaces in MgO. Journal of the Chemical SocietyFaraday Transactions 1996, 92, (3), 433-438.
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31. Wyckoff, R. W. G., Crystal Structures 1. 1963 ed.; Interscience Publishers: New York, 1963.
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32. Sparks, D. J.; Romero-González, M. E.; El-Taboni, E.; Freeman, C. L.; Hall, S. A.; Kakonyi, G.; Swanson, L.; Banwart, S. A.; Harding, J. H., Adsorption of poly acrylic acid onto the surface of calcite: an experimental and simulatino study. Phys Chem Chem Phys 2017, 17, 27375.
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33. Sing, K. S. W.; Everett, D. H.; Haul, R. A. W.; Moscou, L.; Pierotti, R. A.; Rouquerol, J.; Siemieniewska, T., Reporting physisorption data for gas solid systems with special reference to the determination of surface area and porosity (Recommendations 1984). Pure and Applied Chemistry 1985, 57, (4), 603-619.
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34. Boily, J.-F.; Kozin, P. A., Particle morphological and roughness controls on mineral surface charge development. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 2014, 141, (Supplement C), 567-578.
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35. Yu, P.; Kirkpatrick, R. J.; Poe, B.; McMillan, P. F.; Cong, X., Structure of Calcium Silicate Hydrate (C-S-H): Near-, Mid-, and Far-Infrared Spectroscopy. Journal of the American Ceramic Society 1999, 82, (3), 742-748.
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36. Loring, J. S.; Sandstrom, M. H.; Noren, K.; Persson, P., Rethinking arsenate coordination at the surface of goethite. Chemistry 2009, 15, (20), 5063-72.
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37. Kubicki, J. D.; Paul, K. W.; Kabalan, L.; Zhu, Q.; Mrozik, M. K.; Aryanpour, M.; PierreLouis, A. M.; Strongin, D. R., ATR-FTIR and Density Functional Theory Study of the Structures,
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Energetics, and Vibrational Spectra of Phosphate Adsorbed onto Goethite. Langmuir 2012, 28, (41), 14573-14587.
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38. Kwon, K. D.; Kubicki, J. D., Molecular orbital theory study on surface complex structures of phosphates to iron hydroxides: Calculation of vibrational frequencies and adsorption energies. Langmuir 2004, 20, (21), 9249-9254.
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39. Swedlund, P. J.; Sivaloganathan, S.; Miskelly, G. M.; Waterhouse, G. I. N., Assessing the role of silicate polymerization on metal oxyhydroxide surfaces using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Chemical Geology 2011, 285, (1), 62-69.
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Figure Captions
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Figure 1. Schematic representation of crystal habits of rod lepidocrocite (RL), lath lepidocrocite
476
(LL) and goethite (GT) particles under study. See Fig. S1 for transmission electron images.
477
Disposition of surface hydroxo groups on dominant crystallographic faces, taken from results of
478
Song and Boily.19 LL and RL particles expose neutrally-charged µ-OH groups on the (010) face,
479
and ~0.9/nm2 of –OH (~10% of the µ-OH population) from imperfections. The (100) face of LL
480
and GT and the (110) and (100) faces of GT consist of rows of −OH, µ–OH, and µ3–OH groups.
481
About 15% of –OH groups in LL and RL and about 50% of these groups in GT donate a
482
hydrogen bond to a neighboring –OH. The greater population in GT is cause by a permanent
483
hydrogen bond involving and underlying µ3–OH group of structural origin. Terminations of LL
484
and RL consist of (001)-like faces consisting of µ3–OH and bare Fe (Lewis acid) sites (not
485
shown). In GT, the (021) face exposes, on the other hand, both –OH and µ–OH groups, that are
486
strongly hydrogen bonded. (see Fig. S1 and Song and Boily19 for further details).
487 488
Figure 2. Adsorption isotherms of Si on GT, RL and LL particle surface (298 K, no background
489
electrolyte), determined by ICP-OES. Curves were generated using Eq. 1 with the modeling
490
parameters of Table S3. Horizontal grey dashes lined and shaded area indicate the
491
crystallographic density (ρ -OH) of singly-coordinated groups.
492 493
Figure 3. ATR-FTIR spectra of O-H stretching region of N2-dry (298 K) GT, RL and LL
494
particles under study . (a) No silicate present. (b-d) Exposed to aqueous solutions of silicic acid
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at pH 7 for 3 d, then dried under N2(g) at 298 K. See Figs. S5-S7 for full data sets of pH (4 and
496
7) and reaction time (3 and 30 d). We note that bands of –OH groups in samples prepared at pH
497
4 (Figs. S5-S7) are always of lower intensities that those prepared at pH 7 because protonation of
498
–OH to –OH2 alters the hydrogen bonding network and creates vacancies from the desorption of
499
H2O to the gas phase when samples are dry.
500 501
Figure 4. Areas of O-H stretching bands of G and LL as a function of Si loading. Those of RL
502
could not be included due insufficient band intensity in the band of –OH. (a) Band areas of –OH
503
of GT (3667 cm-1 region) and µ-OH of LL (3626 cm-1). (b) Band areas of 3720 and 3740 cm-1
504
arising from O-H stretches of hydroxyl groups of bound silicates.
505 506
Figure 5. The 3630-3690 cm-1 region showing splitting of the 3661 cm-1 band in GT and red-
507
shift of the 3667 cm-1 band of RL with Si loading.
508 509
Figure 6. Top and middle: Representative hydrogen bonding environments of the the (001) face
510
of lepidocrocite (top) and (110) face of GT (middle) with ~1 Si/nm2 mononuclear monodentate
511
complexes, both extracted from a snapshot of MD simulations. Bottom: Schematic representation
512
of plausible configurations of oligomers on GT.
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Table of Contents Graphic
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Schematic representation of crystal habits of rod lepidocrocite (RL), lath lepidocrocite (LL) and goethite (GT) particles under study. See Fig. S1 for transmission electron images. Disposition of surface hydroxo groups on dominant crystallographic faces, taken from results of Song and Boily.19 LL and RL particles expose neutrally-charged µ-OH groups on the (010) face, and ~0.9/nm2 of –OH (~10% of the µ-OH population) from imperfections. The (100) face of LL and GT and the (110) and (100) faces of GT consist of rows of −OH, µ–OH, and µ3–OH groups. About 15% of –OH groups in LL and RL and about 50% of these groups in GT donate a hydrogen bond to a neighboring –OH. The greater population in GT is cause by a permanent hydrogen bond involving and underlying µ3–OH group of structural origin. Terminations of LL and RL consist of (001)-like faces consisting of µ3–OH and bare Fe (Lewis acid) sites (not shown). In GT, the (021) face exposes, on the other hand, both –OH and µ–OH groups, that are strongly hydrogen bonded. (see Fig. S1 and Song and Boily19 for further details). 112x96mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Adsorption isotherms of Si on GT, RL and LL particle surface (298 K, no background electrolyte), determined by ICP-OES. Curves were generated using Eq. 1 with the modeling parameters of Table S3. Horizontal grey dashes lined and shaded area indicate the crystallographic density (ρ -OH) of singly-coordinated groups. 235x170mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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ATR-FTIR spectra of O-H stretching region of N2-dry (298 K) GT, RL and LL particles under study . (a) No silicate present. (b-d) Exposed to aqueous solutions of silicic acid at pH 7 for 3 d, then dried under N2(g) at 298 K. See Figs. S5-S7 for full data sets of pH (4 and 7) and reaction time (3 and 30 d). We note that bands of –OH groups in samples prepared at pH 4 (Figs. S5-S7) are always of lower intensities that those prepared at pH 7 because protonation of –OH to –OH2 alters the hydrogen bonding network and creates vacancies from the desorption of H2O to the gas phase when samples are dry. 347x85mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Areas of O-H stretching bands of G and LL as a function of Si loading. Those of RL could not be included due insufficient band intensity in the band of –OH. (a) Band areas of –OH of GT (3667 cm-1 region) and µ-OH of LL (3626 cm-1). (b) Band areas of 3720 and 3740 cm-1 arising from O-H stretches of hydroxyl groups of bound silicates. 232x210mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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The 3630-3690 cm-1 region showing splitting of the 3661 cm-1 band in GT and red-shift of the 3667 cm-1 band of RL with Si loading. 299x99mm (300 x 300 DPI)
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Top and middle: Representative hydrogen bonding environments of the the (001) face of lepidocrocite (top) and (110) face of GT (middle) with ~1 Si/nm2 mononuclear monodentate complexes, both extracted from a snapshot of MD simulations. Bottom: Schematic representation of plausible configurations of oligomers on GT.
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