4.8 Article

U(VI) Sorption and Reduction Kinetics on the Magnetite (111) Surface

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 46, Issue 7, Pages 3821-3830

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es203878c

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy BES [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  2. DOE-BER
  3. DOE-BER through Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
  4. U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Basic Energy Science

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Sorption of contaminants onto mineral surfaces is an important process that can restrict their transport in the environment. In the current study, uranium (U) uptake on magnetite (111) was measured as a function of time and solution composition (pH, [CO3](T), [Ca]) under continuous batch-flow conditions. We observed, in real-time and in situ, adsorption and reduction of U(VI) and subsequent growth of UO2 nanoprecipitates using atomic force microscopy (AFM) and newly developed batch-flow U L-III-edge grazing-incidence X-ray absorption spectroscopy near-edge structure (GI-XANES) spectroscopy. U(VI) reduction occurred with and without CO3 present, and coincided with nucleation and growth of UO2 particles. When Ca and CO3 were both present no U(VI) reduction occurred and the U surface loading was lower, in situ batch-flow AFM data indicated that UO2 particles achieved a maximum height of 4-5 nm after about 8 h of exposure, however, aggregates continued to grow laterally after 8 h reaching up to about 300 nm in diameter. The combination of techniques indicated that U uptake is divided into three-stages; (1) initial adsorption of U(VI), (2) reduction of U(VI) to UO2 nanoprecipitates at surface-specific sites after 2-3 h of exposure, and (3) completion of U(VI) reduction after similar to 6-8 h. U(VI) reduction also corresponded to detectable increases in Fe released to solution and surface topography changes. Redox reactions are proposed that explicitly couple the reduction of U(VI) to enhanced release of Fe(II) from magnetite. Although counterintuitive, the proposed reaction stoichiometry was shown to be largely consistent with the experimental results. In addition to providing molecular-scale details about U sorption on magnetite, this work also presents novel advances for collecting surface sensitive molecular-scale information in real-time under batch-flow conditions.

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