4.7 Article

Reductive transformation of birnessite by low-molecular-weight organic acids

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 325, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2023.138414

Keywords

Feitknechtite; Manganite; X-ray diffraction (XRD); Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR); Linear combination fit (LCF)

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Soil biogeochemistry is interconnected with the redox cycling of iron and manganese, where manganese oxides serve as electron acceptors and might be reduced by organic substances as electron donors. In this study, we investigated the impact of low-molecular-weight organic acids (LMWOA) on the transformation of birnessite. Our findings suggest that the reductive transformation of birnessite into more stable forms of manganese oxides is facilitated by the oxidation of LMWOA, which serves as electron donors. This process plays a critical role in controlling the abundance of LMWOA in natural systems.
Soil biogeochemistry is intrinsically coupled to the redox cycling of iron and manganese. Oxidized manganese forms various (hydr)oxides that may reductively transform and dissolve, thereby serving as electron acceptors for microbial metabolisms. Furthermore, manganese oxides might reduce purely abiotically by oxidation of dissolved Mn2+ in a specific route of transformation from birnessite (MnIVO2) into metastable feitknechtite (gamma-(MnOOH)-O-III) and stable manganite (gamma-(MnOOH)-O-III). In natural soil solutions, however, dissolved Mn2+ is not abundant and organic substances such as low-molecular-weight organic acids (LMWOA) may be oxidized and serve as an electron donor for manganese oxide reduction instead. We investigated whether LMWOA would impact the transformation of birnessite at a temperature of 290 +/- 2 K under ambient pressure for up to 1200 d. We found that birnessite was reductively transformed into feitknechtite, which subsequently alters into the more stable manganite without releasing Mn2+ into the solution. Instead, LMWOA served as electron donors and were oxidized from lactate into pyruvate, acetate, oxalate, and finally, inorganic carbon. We conclude that the reductive transformation of short-range ordered minerals like birnessite by the abiotic oxidation of LMWOA is a critical process controlling the abundance of LMWOA in natural systems besides their microbial consumption. Our results further suggest that the reduction of Mn-IV oxides not necessarily results in their dissolution at neutral and alkaline pH but also forms more stable Mn-III oxyhydroxides with less oxidative degradation potential for organic contaminants.

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