Organic complexation of Fe(II) and its impact on the redox cycling of iron in rain.

Environ Sci Technol

Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of North Carolina at Wilmington, Wilmington, North Carolina 28403-3297, USA.

Published: March 2005

More than 80% of the iron(II) present in a dilute (pH 4.5) H2SO4 solution was oxidized by hydrogen peroxide (3 microM) in 24 h, whereas in rainwater Fe(II) remained stable for days indicating that a complexed form of Fe(II) exists in rainwater that protects it against oxidation. When a rain sample was irradiated for 2 h with simulated sunlight, there was a 57 nM increase in Fe(II) resulting from photoreduction of organic Fe(III) complexes. Once irradiation ceased, the photoproduced Fe(II) rapidly oxidized back to its initial concentration of 32 nM prior to irradiation, but not to zero. These photochemical studies demonstrate that during the daytime when sunlight is present there are dynamic interconversions between complexed and uncomplexed Fe(II) and Fe(III) species in rainwater. During the night, after the photochemically produced Fe(II) is reoxidized to Fe(III), virtually all remaining Fe(II) is complexed by ligands which resist further oxidation. Rain samples oxidized under intense UV light lost their ability to stabilize Fe(II), suggesting the ligands stabilizing Fe(II) are organic compounds destroyed by UV-irradiation. Additional UV-irradiation studies demonstrated that on average 25% of the Fe-complexing ligands in rainwater are extremely strong and cannot be detected by spectrophotometric analysis using ferrozine. The stability of organically complexed Fe(II) has important implications for the bioavailability of rainwater-derived Fe in the surface ocean.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es040439hDOI Listing

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