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  4. Distinctive Arsenic(V) Trapping Modes by Magnetite Nanoparticles Induced by Different Sorption Processes
 
research article

Distinctive Arsenic(V) Trapping Modes by Magnetite Nanoparticles Induced by Different Sorption Processes

Wang, Yuheng  
•
Morin, Guillaume
•
Ona-Nguema, Georges
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2011
Environmental Science & Technology

Arsenic sorption onto iron oxide spinels such as magnetite may contribute to arsenic immobilization at redox fronts in soils, sediments, and aquifers, as well as in putative remediation and water treatment technologies. We have investigated As(V) speciation tresulting from different sorption processes on magnetite nanoparticles, including both adsorption and precipitation, using X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). XAFS results suggest that AsO4 tetrahedra form predominantly inner sphere bidentate corner sharing (C-2) complexes and outer-sphere complexes on magnetite in the adsorption experiments. In the precipitation experiments, an increasing fraction of AsO4 tetrahedra appears to be incorporated in clusters having a magnetite-like local structure with increasing As loading, the remaining fraction of As being adsorbed at the surface of magnetite particles. In the sample with the highest As loading (15.7 mu mol/m(2)) XAFS data indicate that As(V) is fully incorporated in such clusters. Such processes help to explain the significantly higher arsenic uptake in precipitation samples compared to those generated in adsorption experiments. In addition, for the precipitation samples, TEM observations indicate the formation of amorphous coatings and small (similar to 3 nm) nanoparticles associated with larger (similar to 20-40 nm) magnetite nanoparticles, which are absent in the adsorption samples. These results suggest that As(V) could form complexes at the surfaces of the small nanoparticles and could be progressively incorporated in their structure with increasing As loading. These results provide some of the fundamental knowledge about As(V)-magnetite interactions that is essential for developing effective water treatment technologies for arsenic.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/es200299f
Web of Science ID

WOS:000294373400025

Author(s)
Wang, Yuheng  
Morin, Guillaume
Ona-Nguema, Georges
Juillot, Farid
Calas, Georges
Brown, Gordon E.
Date Issued

2011

Published in
Environmental Science & Technology
Volume

45

Start page

7258

End page

7266

Subjects

Exafs Evidence

•

Surface-Structure

•

Mine Tailings

•

Iron

•

Reduction

•

Arsenate

•

Ferrihydrite

•

Spectroscopy

•

Release

•

As(V)

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
IIE  
Available on Infoscience
December 16, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/73640
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