iron ascorbic acid aquifer arsenic floodplain deposit goethite hematite
Issue Date:
2010
Publisher:
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
Citation:
Volume: 74, Issue: 12, Page : 3367-3381
Abstract:
Abstract: Sediments from the Red River and from an adjacent floodplain aquifer were investigated with
respect to the speciation of Fe and As in the solid phase, to trace the diagenetic changes in the river sediment
upon burial into young aquifers, and the related mechanisms of arsenic release to the groundwater. Goethite
with subordinate amounts of hematite were, using M??ssbauer spectroscopy, identified as the iron oxide
minerals present in both types of sediment. The release kinetics of Fe, As, Mn and PO4 from the sediment
were investigated in leaching experiments with HCl and 10mM ascorbic acid, both at pH 3. From the river
sediments, most of the Fe and As was mobilized by reductive dissolution with ascorbic acid while HCl
released very little Fe and As. This suggests As to be associated with an Fe-oxide phase. For oxidized
aquifer sediment most Fe was mobilized by ascorbic acid but here not much As was released. However, the
reduced aquifer sediments contained a large pool of Fe(II) and As that is readily leached by HCl, probably
derived from an unidentified authigenic Fe(II)-containing mineral which incorporates As as well. Extraction
with ascorbic acid indicates that the river sediments contain both As(V) and As(III), while the reduced
aquifer sediment almost exclusively releases As(III). The difference in the amount of Fe(II) leached from
river and oxidized aquifer sediments by ascorbic acid and HCl, was attributed to reductive dissolution of
Fe(III). The reactivity of this pool of Fe(III) was quantified by a rate law and compared to that of synthetic
iron oxides. In the river mud, Fe(III) had a reactivity close to that of ferrihydrite, while the river sand and
oxidized aquifer sediment exhibited a reactivity ranging from lepidocrocite or poorly crystalline goethite to
hematite. Mineralogy by itself appears to be a poor predictor of the iron oxide reactivity in natural samples
using the reactivity of synthetic Fe-oxides as a reference. Sediments were incubated, both unamended and
with acetate added, and monitored for up to 2months. The river mud showed the fastest release of both Fe
and As, while the effect of acetate addition was minor. This suggests that the presence of reactive organic
carbon is not rate limiting. In the case of the river and aquifer sediments, the release of Fe and As was
always stimulated by acetate addition and here reactive organic carbon was clearly the rate limiting factor.
The reduced aquifer sediment apparently can sustain slower but prolonged microbially-driven release of As.
The highly reactive pools of Fe(III) and As in the river mud could be due to reoxidation of As and Fe
contained in the reducing groundwater from the floodplain aquifers that are discharging into the river.
Deposition of the suspended mud on the floodplain during high river stages is proposed to be a major flux of
As onto the floodplain and into the underlying aquifers. ?? 2010 Elsevier Ltd.