4.4 Article

Kinetics and mechanism of birnessite reduction by catechol

Journal

SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL
Volume 65, Issue 1, Pages 58-66

Publisher

SOIL SCI SOC AMER
DOI: 10.2136/sssaj2001.65158x

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The complex interactions of oxidizable organic ligands with soil Mn(III,IV) (hydr)oxide minerals have received little study by in situ spectroscopic techniques. We used a combination of an in situ electron paramagnetic resonance stopped-flow (EPR-SF) spectroscopic technique and stirred-batch studies to measure the reductive dissolution kinetics of birnessite (delta -MnO2), a common Mn mineral in soils, by catechol (1,2-dihydroxybenzene). The reaction was rapid, independent of pH, and essentially complete within seconds under conditions of excess-catechol at pH 4 to 6. The overall empirical second-order rate equation describing the reductive dissolution rate was d[Mn(II)]/ dt = k[CAT](1.0)[SA](1.0) where k = 4 (+/-0.5) (10(-3) L m(-2) s(-1) and [CAT] and [SA] are the initial concentrations in molarity and meters square per liter. In the process, catechol was oxidized to the two-electron o-quinone product. The energy of activation (E.) for the reaction was 59 (+/-7) kJ mol(-1) and the activation entropy (SI) was -78 +/- 225 mol(-1) K-1, suggesting that the reaction was surface-chemical controlled and occurs by an associative mechanism. Rates of catechol disappearance from solution with simultaneous Mn(II) and o-quinone production were comparable. These data strongly suggest that precursor surface-complex formation is rate-limiting and that electron transfer is rapid, The rapid reductive dissolution of birnessite by catechol has significant implications for C and Mn cycling in soils and the availability of Mn to plants.

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