4.8 Article

Influence of Magnetite Stoichiometry on the Binding of Emerging Organic Contaminants

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 2, Pages 467-473

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b04849

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Funding

  1. ADEME Agence de l'Environnement et de la Maitrise de l'Energie [1472C0030]

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While the magnetite stoichiometry (i.e., Fe(II)/Fe(III) ratio) has been extensively studied for the reductive transformation of chlorinated or nitroaromatic compounds, no work exists examining the influence of stoichiometry of magnetite on its binding properties. This study, for the first time, demonstrates that the stoichiometry strongly affects the capacity of magnetite to bind not only quinolone antibiotics such as nalidixic acid, (NA) and, flumequine (FLU), but also salicylic acid (SA), natural organic matter (humic acid HA), and dissolved silicates. Fe(II)-amendment of nonstoichiometric magnetite (Fe(II)/Fe(III) = 0.40) led to similar sorbed amounts of NA, FLU, SA, silicates or HA as compared to the stoichiometric magnetite (i.e., Fe(II)/Fe(III) = 0:50). At any pH between 6 and 10, all magnetites exhibiting similar Fe(II)/Fe(III) ratio in the solid, phase showed similar adsorption, properties for NA or FLU. This enhancement in binding capability of magnetite for NA is still observed in the presence of environmentally relevant ligands (e.g., 10 mg L-1 of HA or 100 mu M of silicates). Using surface complexation modeling, it was shown that the NA-magnetite complexation constant does not vary with Fe(II)/Fe(III) between 0.24 and 0.40, but increases by 8 orders of magnitude when Fe(II)/Fe(III) increases from 0.40 to 0.50.

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