4.7 Article

Environmental effects on ammonium adsorption onto clay minerals: Experimental constraints and applications

Journal

APPLIED CLAY SCIENCE
Volume 246, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.clay.2023.107165

Keywords

Ammonium adsorption; Clay minerals; pH; Temperature; Salinity; Geological nitrogen cycle

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Clay minerals have a significant impact on Earth's nitrogen cycle and the synthesis of organic compounds. We conducted laboratory experiments to examine the adsorption behavior of clay minerals under different environmental conditions. The results indicate that the adsorption capacity of clay minerals is dependent on the mineral type, pH, temperature, and salinity. Vermiculite and montmorillonite have higher adsorption capacities due to their ability to adsorb ammonium in interlayer sites.
Adsorption of ammonium (NH4+) by clay minerals in soil/sediment and altered oceanic crust plays an important role in Earth's geological nitrogen cycle by transporting nitrogen from the biosphere and hydrosphere into the lithosphere. Clay minerals have also been proposed to play an important role in catalyzing abiotic synthesis of organic compounds (which also requires adsorption enrichment of NH4+) for the origin of life. Consequently, nitrogen in clay minerals could be used as a potential tracer for reconstructing paleo-environments and searching for life on extraterrestrial planets and moons. However, the premise of these applications, i.e., how different environmental conditions (e.g., ambient pH, temperature, salinity and aqueous NH4+ concentration) would affect NH4+ adsorption onto clay minerals, is still poorly understood. In this study, we carried out laboratory experiments to examine the NH4+ adsorption behavior of several clay minerals (montmorillonite, vermiculite, illite, chlorite, kaolinite) under conditions varying in aqueous NH4+ concentration (20, 50, 100, 200, 500, 1000 mg/L), pH (2, 5, 7), salinity (fresh water vs. artificial seawater), and temperature (23, 50, 70(degrees)C). Our results show that the NH4+ adsorption on all studied minerals is very fast (reaching equilibrium within a few minutes). The NH4+ adsorption capacity is however strongly mineral-dependent and follows the order of vermiculite approximate to montmoril-lonite >> illite > kaolinite approximate to chlorite. The much higher NH4+ adsorption capacities of vermiculite and montmorillonite can be attributed to the NH4+ adsorption in their interlayer sites in addition to the surface and edge sites that dominate the NH4+ adsorption in illite, kaolinite, and chlorite. But illite contains some frayed edge sites that are accessible to NH4+ adsorption, and thus has higher adsorption capacity than kaolinite and chlorite. The NH4+ adsorption on all these clay minerals is highly susceptible to environmental conditions (e.g., aqueous NH4+ concentration, pH, temperature, and salinity). For example, the NH4+ adsorption capacities of montmorillonite and vermiculite significantly decrease following the increase in salinity and the decreases in pH and aqueous NH4+ concentration. Our experimental data can be best fitted by the Freundlich Model, which suggests that NH4+ adsorption on clay minerals likely occurs in energetically heterogeneous surface sites. Based on these results, we provide new insights into the understanding of NH4+ migration from seawater to sediments and altered oceanic crust, preservation capability of the paleoenvironmental nitrogen signature in clay minerals, and optimal conditions for clay to catalyze organic synthesis toward the origin of life on the early Earth.

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