Layered double hydroxides (LDH) of Mg/Al are anion exchangers that are candidate materials for phosphate (PO) recovery and recycling from waste streams. However, PO recycling in agriculture might be limited by incomplete desorption of PO from the minerals. This study was set up to identify the factors explaining irreversible PO sorption ("fixation") on LDHs by comparing the isotopic exchangeability (PO) with the PO desorption from LDH materials and from boehmite as a P fixing reference mineral. Six different Mg-Al LDH materials were synthesized, by varying the synthesis pH and exposing obtained materials to hydrothermal (HT) treatment. Phase pure LDH materials were obtained from syntheses at pH 10 and 12, while at pH 8 Al-rich phase impurities such as a boehmite or gibbsite were formed. Crystallite size increased significantly during HT treatment. The LDHs were first loaded with PO prior to PO isotopic exchange (0-20 days, 1 mM NaHCO) or PO desorption (0-20 days, NaHCO concentrations increasing from 0 to 20 mM). The isotopic PO exchangeability was 85-95% of total PO after 72 h in the phase pure LDHs with intercalated PO whereas this value was 40-54% in the presence of Al-rich phase impurities in non-HT treated materials and in boehmite. In contrast, the maximally desorbed PO fractions were only 55-63% for the phase pure LDHs, indicating that not all of the isotopically exchangeable PO can be desorbed. Samples at different stages of desorption (different initial NaHCO concentrations) were subjected to isotopic exchange after desorption. In the LDHs with PO intercalation, PO was increasingly less isotopically exchangeable as the initial NaHCO concentrations increased, while this trend was not observed for samples without intercalated PO. This suggests that PO becomes increasingly less accessible for isotopic exchange as the fraction binding sites occupied with HCO increases. The interlayer outward diffusion of PO might be increasingly rate limited upon HPO/HCO exchange, which explains the PO fixation in LDHs.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2018.03.010 | DOI Listing |
Environ Pollut
January 2025
Department of Geology, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, India.
Evolution of groundwater genesis in Central Ganga Plain (CGP) is scrutinized with due consideration of hydrochemical and hydrodynamic environment within Quaternary alluviums. Wide variation in hydrochemical facies in CGP indicates a dynamic hydro-geochemical environment influenced from the seasonal rainfall, return flows, canal seepages, and anthropogenic activities. The Ca-HCO facies retaining meteoric nature is characterized by shallow water levels, high recharge rate, high hydraulic conductivity, low salinity and trace elemental load.
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January 2025
Key Laboratory of Coastal Environment and Resources of Zhejiang Province, School of Engineering, Westlake University, Hangzhou 310024, China. Electronic address:
Saltmarshes serve as repositories for various metal species, primarily due to vegetation removal and mineralization processes. However, the significance of potassium (K), one of the three major nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorus, and K) essential for plant growth, has often been overlooked, particularly in the context of saltmarshes where the mechanisms of K transport via porewater exchange remain poorly understood. To address this knowledge gap, we conducted field observations and laboratory analysis, and developed a Rn mass balance model to quantify K fluxes via porewater exchange under physical, biological, and anthropogenic drivers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater Res
December 2024
Key Laboratory of Lake and Watershed Science for Water Security, Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing 211135, China; Sino-Danish Centre for Education and Research, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100039, China; Poyang Lake Wetland Research Station, Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Jiujiang 332899, China. Electronic address:
Flash drought (FD) events induced by climate change may disrupt the normal hydrological regimes of floodplain lakes and affect the plant-microbe mediated dissimilatory nitrate reduction (DNR), i.e., denitrification, anammox and dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA), thus having important consequences for nitrous oxide (NO) emissions and nitrogen (N) retention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
January 2025
Institute for Research in Immunology and Cancer (IRIC), Université de Montréal, Montréal, QC, H3T 1J4, Canada.
Intense research on founding members of the RAS superfamily has defined our understanding of these critical signalling proteins, leading to the premise that small GTPases function as molecular switches dependent on differential nucleotide loading. The closest homologs of H/K/NRAS are the three-member RRAS family, and interest in the MRAS GTPase as a regulator of MAPK activity has recently intensified. We show here that MRAS does not function as a classical switch and is unable to exchange GDP-to-GTP in solution or when tethered to a lipid bilayer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
January 2025
Universitat Bern, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Freiestrasse 3, 3012, Bern, SWITZERLAND.
Isotope Exchange processes are becoming the preferred way to prepare isotopically labelled molecules, avoiding the redesign of multistep synthetic protocols. In the case of deuterium incorporation, the most used strategy has employed transition metals, that offer high reactivity under mild reaction conditions. Despite their success, the trade-off is that these metals are precious, and often exhibit high toxicity.
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