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  4. Metal flux through consuming interfaces in ligand mixtures: boundary conditions do not influence the lability and relative contributions of metal species
 
research article

Metal flux through consuming interfaces in ligand mixtures: boundary conditions do not influence the lability and relative contributions of metal species

Zhang, Zeshi
•
Alemani, Davide
•
Buffle, Jacques
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2011
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics

In a mixture of metal ions and complexes, it is difficult to predict ecological risk without understanding the contribution of each metal species to biouptake. For microorganisms, the rate of uptake (internalization flux) has not only a major influence on the total metal flux but also on the bioavailability of the various metal species and their relative contributions to the total flux. In this paper, the microorganism is considered as a consuming interface, which interacts with the metal ion, M, via the Michaelis-Menten boundary conditions. The contribution of each metal complex to the overall metal flux, in relation to its lability, is examined for a number of important boundary parameters (the equilibrium constant K-a of metal with transport sites, internalization rate constant k(int) and total transport sites concentration {R}(t)). Computations were performed for Cu(II) complexes, in a multicomponent culture medium for microoganisms. For a one-ligand system, results were acquired using rigorous mathematical expressions, whereas approximate expressions, based on the reaction layer approximation (RLA) and rigorous numerical computations (computer codes MHEDYN and FLUXY), were employed for ligand mixtures. Under the condition of ligand excess, as often found in the natural environment, the relative contribution of each metal species to the total flux is shown to be independent of the boundary conditions. This finding has important implications, including an improved basis for relating the analytical signals of dynamic metal speciation sensors to metal bioavailability.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1039/c1cp20705a
Web of Science ID

WOS:000295377700019

Author(s)
Zhang, Zeshi
Alemani, Davide
Buffle, Jacques
Town, Raewyn M.
Wilkinson, Kevin J.
Date Issued

2011

Published in
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
Volume

13

Issue

39

Article Number

17606

Subjects

Bioavailability

•

Ecotoxicology

Editorial or Peer reviewed

NON-REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
IBI  
Available on Infoscience
September 30, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/71407
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