Organic compounds alter the preference and rates of heavy metal adsorption on ferrihydrite.

Sci Total Environ

Department of Earth System Science, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, United States. Electronic address:

Published: January 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Heavy metals in soil are influenced by their interactions with minerals and organic matter, particularly iron minerals, which play a key role in how these metals behave in the environment.
  • The study examines how different organic compounds attached to ferrihydrite affect the binding of heavy metals like Cadmium (Cd), Zinc (Zn), and Nickel (Ni), suggesting that the chemical properties of these organic compounds significantly impact metal binding.
  • Findings show that specific organic functional groups enhance metal binding due to increased binding sites, with the order of metal binding strength determined by the metal's chemical properties, providing insights into heavy metal interactions in soil.

Article Abstract

The availability of heavy metals in terrestrial environments is largely controlled by their interactions with minerals and organic matter, with iron minerals having a particularly strong role in heavy metal fate. Because soil organic matter contains a variety of compounds that differ in their chemical properties, the underlying impact organic matter-soil mineral associations bestow on heavy metal binding is still unresolved. Here, we systematically examine the binding of Cd, Zn and Ni by a suite of organic-ferrihydrite assemblages, chosen to account for various compound chemistries within soil organic matter. We posited that organic compound functionality would dictate the extent of association with the organic-ferrihydrite assemblages. Increased heavy metal binding to the assemblages was observed and attributed to the introduction of additional binding sites by the organic functional groups with differing metal affinities. The relative increase depended on the metal's Lewis acidity and followed the order Cd > Zn > Ni, whereas the reverse order was obtained for metal binding by pristine ferrihydrite (Ni > Zn > Cd). Citric acid-, aspartic acid- and cysteine-ferrihydrite assemblages also enhanced the metal binding rate. X-ray absorption spectroscopy revealed that the organic coating contributed significantly to Zn binding by the assemblages, despite relatively low organic surface coverage. Our findings provide valuable information on the nature of heavy metal-organic-mineral interactions and metal adsorption processes regulating their bioavailability and transport.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.141485DOI Listing

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