4.7 Article

Insights into Pb(II) binding by Fe/Al hydroxide-microbe composite: XAFS spectroscopy and isothermal titration calorimetry study

Journal

CHEMICAL GEOLOGY
Volume 510, Issue -, Pages 84-90

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2019.02.024

Keywords

Fe/Al hydroxide; Bacteria; Mineral-organo associations; Adsorption; Trace elements; EXAFS; ITC

Funding

  1. Hunan Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [2018JJ3239]
  2. Science Foundation for Young Scholars of Hunan Agricultural University [17QN37]

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Soil is a complex assemble of colloidal and particulate constituents, including minerals, organic matter and microbes. Minerals and organics are not separate entities; rather, they are constantly interacting with each other. Such mineral-organic interaction can greatly affect the sequestration of metallic elements at the soil-water interfaces. This study aims to explore the binding of Pb(II) in a model Fe/Al hydroxide-organo composite (Fe/Al-OM) made with Pseudomonas putida cells which, for the purposes of this study, can be considered to be an analogue of some natural soil microaggregates. We measure an enhanced Pb adsorption to the Fe/Al hydroxidebacteria composite (Fe/Al-B) over pure Fe/Al hydroxide at pH < 5.5. We find that Fe/Al-B sorbs an intermediate amount of Pb between the end-member Fe/Al hydroxide and bacteria. We identify a bidentate edge-sharing Pb complex on the Fe/Al oxide surfaces with a Pb-Fe/Al bond distance of similar to 3.33 angstrom, as well as a monodentate carboxyl binding on the bacterial surfaces. We report that Pb binding is an exothermic, energetically favorable process accompanied by positive entropy. Moreover, Pb distribution shifts from the bacterial fraction to the mineral fraction in Fe/Al-B when pH increases from 4 to 6.5. Results from batch to spectroscopic and thermodynamic experiments will facilitate our understanding of Pb speciation, mobility and fate in soils and sediments.

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