Journal
CHEMICAL GEOLOGY
Volume 583, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2021.120481
Keywords
Lepidocrocite; Cr(VI); Photochemical reaction; Oxic-acidic environment; Reactive oxygen species
Categories
Funding
- China National Key Research and Development Plan Project [2016YFD0800700]
- National Natural Science Foundation of China [41977018, 41830861]
- Program for Guangdong Introducing Innovative and Entrepreneurial Teams [2017ZT07Z479]
- GDAS' Project of Science and Technology Development [2021GDASYL-20210103044]
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The study revealed the photochemical behavior of Cr(VI) and oxalate on lepidocrocite surfaces under light illumination, as well as the interaction mechanism between them, providing new insights into the natural attenuation of Cr(VI) toxicity in natural water systems.
The transformation of contaminants by photocatalysts under light illumination has been extensively studied in engineered water systems. However, the interfacial photoreaction mechanism for the reduction of chromium (Cr(VI)) on natural iron (Fe) oxides in acidic and oxic surface waters associated with soil remain unclear. Herein, the photochemical behavior of Cr(VI) and oxalate on lepidocmcite surfaces was investigated to disclose the natural detoxification process of Cr(VI). Kinetic results showed that Cr(VI) was quickly reduced in the system with lepidocrocite and oxalate under light illumination, while no Cr(VI) reduction was observed in the dark. No obvious secondary Fe oxides and Cr-containing precipitates were found, but the newly generated Cr(III) was evenly distributed on the lepidocrocite surface or entered into the lepidocrocite defects. Cr(VI) and oxalate can form ternary complexes with lepidocmcite, and Cr(VI) reduction and the oxidation of oxalate to carbon dioxide occurred simultaneously on the lepidocrocite surface. Amongst the reactions involving lepidocrocite, oxalate, and Cr(VI), the oxidation of oxalate was attributed to reactive oxygen species such as H2O2, (OH)-O-center dot, and O-center dot(2)-, while Cr(VI) reduction was mainly caused by photogenerated electrons, (CO2-)-C-center dot, H2O2, Fe(II), and through the direct electron transfer in the Cr(VI)-oxalate complex. The findings of the Cr(VI) molecular-scale photoreduction mechanism on mineral surfaces would have implications for interpreting the natural attenuation of Cr(VI) toxicity in natural surface waters associated with soil.
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