TY - JOUR
T1 - Interactions of Goethite and Natural Organic Matter
T2 - Fractionation and Impact on Contaminant Reduction
AU - Soroush, Adel
AU - Harris, Celina M
AU - Hildebrandt, Alanna M.
AU - Cruz-Reyes, Maetzin
AU - Penn, R. Lee
AU - Arnold, William A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2024/2/15
Y1 - 2024/2/15
N2 - Elucidating how organic matter and iron oxide particles interact will advance the understanding of geochemical processes and facilitate the development and implementation of methods to address groundwater pollution. The sorption and fractionation of three well-characterized organic matter isolates, Suwannee River natural organic matter (SRNOM), Suwannee River fulvic acid (SRFA), and Eliot Soil humic acid (ESHA), onto goethite nanoparticles in batch reactors and goethite-coated sand in column reactors were studied. Total organic carbon, molecular size, and optical properties were measured before and after exposure to solids in batch and column reactors, as well as in solution after the resuspension of equilibrated solids in a fresh buffer. Fluorescent, aromatic, high-molecular-weight material more strongly sorbed and stayed sorbed upon exposure to fresh solution. The effects of the different organic matter fractions on reduction of 4-chloronitrobenzene (4-ClNB) were also quantified. In both batch and column reactors, the reactivity of NOM-treated particles toward 4-ClNB in the presence of Fe(II) was inhibited by all isolates as compared to that in NOM-free reactors, with SRFA inhibiting reaction rate constants the most followed by ESHA and SRNOM. There are clear spectral and size differences in the organic matter that remains in the liquid medium compared to the NOM that binds to the mineral surfaces, but both of these materials inhibit Fe(II)-mediated reactions on the surface. Materials high in aliphatic and carboxylate contents, rather than the more strongly sorbing fluorescent aromatic material, appear to inhibit reactivity.
AB - Elucidating how organic matter and iron oxide particles interact will advance the understanding of geochemical processes and facilitate the development and implementation of methods to address groundwater pollution. The sorption and fractionation of three well-characterized organic matter isolates, Suwannee River natural organic matter (SRNOM), Suwannee River fulvic acid (SRFA), and Eliot Soil humic acid (ESHA), onto goethite nanoparticles in batch reactors and goethite-coated sand in column reactors were studied. Total organic carbon, molecular size, and optical properties were measured before and after exposure to solids in batch and column reactors, as well as in solution after the resuspension of equilibrated solids in a fresh buffer. Fluorescent, aromatic, high-molecular-weight material more strongly sorbed and stayed sorbed upon exposure to fresh solution. The effects of the different organic matter fractions on reduction of 4-chloronitrobenzene (4-ClNB) were also quantified. In both batch and column reactors, the reactivity of NOM-treated particles toward 4-ClNB in the presence of Fe(II) was inhibited by all isolates as compared to that in NOM-free reactors, with SRFA inhibiting reaction rate constants the most followed by ESHA and SRNOM. There are clear spectral and size differences in the organic matter that remains in the liquid medium compared to the NOM that binds to the mineral surfaces, but both of these materials inhibit Fe(II)-mediated reactions on the surface. Materials high in aliphatic and carboxylate contents, rather than the more strongly sorbing fluorescent aromatic material, appear to inhibit reactivity.
KW - batch reactor
KW - column reactor
KW - electron transfer
KW - groundwater
KW - reduction
KW - sorption
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U2 - 10.1021/acsearthspacechem.3c00334
DO - 10.1021/acsearthspacechem.3c00334
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85184487586
SN - 2472-3452
VL - 8
SP - 393
EP - 404
JO - ACS Earth and Space Chemistry
JF - ACS Earth and Space Chemistry
IS - 2
ER -