Influence of soil minerals on the rates and products of abiotic transformation of carbon tetrachloride in anaerobic soils and sediments.

Environ Sci Technol

School of Civil Engineering and Environmental Science, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma, 73019, USA.

Published: March 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study measured how effectively carbon tetrachloride (CT) was transformed in microcosms made from natural soils and sediments, under conditions that minimized microbial activity.
  • Initially, CT disappearance seemed related to the presence of weakly bound iron (Fe(II)), but overall results showed no strong link between CT transformation rates and mineral concentrations.
  • A negative correlation was found between CT transformation rates and the amount of extractable sulfur, with findings indicating that as pyrite increased at the mineral surface, CT transformation and chloroform production decreased.

Article Abstract

Rates and products of abiotic mineral-mediated carbon tetrachloride (CT) transformation were measured in microcosms prepared from natural soils and sediments that were incubated under iron-reducing and sulfate-reducing conditions, then sterilized to inhibit microbial activity. For one set of microcosms, the rate of CT disappearance was correlated with the concentration of weakly bound (MgCl2 extractable) Fe(II) in an experiment in which CT was repeatedly spiked into the microcosms. When pooling the results from all microcosms, however, there was no statistically significant positive correlation between CT transformation rate and the concentration of weakly bound Fe(II) or any other mineral species. There was, however, a statistically significant negative correlation between CT transformation rate and the concentration of Cr(II) extractable sulfur (CrES). Evidence from X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy in a related model system containing a mixture of FeS and pyrite ("aged FeS") showed that the decline in CT disappearance rate corresponded to a decrease in the abundance of FeS and an increase in the abundance of pyrite at the mineral surface. For aged FeS, the yield of chloroform (CF) also decreased as the abundance of pyrite at the surface increased, and there was an inverse relationship between the yields of CF and CS2.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es8026727DOI Listing

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