4.7 Article

The role of interfacial reactions in controlling the distribution of Cd within goethite-humic acid-bacteria composites

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 405, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.124081

Keywords

Composite; Bridging; Site masking; EXAFS; ITC; Cd

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program [2020YFC1806800-3]
  2. Key Project of Technological Innovation of Hubei Province [2018ABA092]
  3. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2019M662667]

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Mineral-organic interfacial reactions play a significant role in the adsorption, distribution, and bioavailability of metal cations in soil systems. The study found that in composites, Cd adsorption is mainly governed by the entropy of Cd adsorption onto the organic fraction. Additionally, modeling suggests that humic acid is the primary scavenger of Cd, while bacteria become important in affecting Cd distribution under lower pH conditions.
Mineral-organic interfacial reactions strongly influence the adsorption, distribution and bioavailability of metal cations in soil systems. The molecular binding mechanisms and distribution of Cd onto goethite, humic acid, Pseudomonas putida cells, and their composites at different mass ratios were studied through the combination of bulk adsorption coupled with EXAFS, ITC and SCM. In binary and ternary composites, the energetics of the overall adsorption of Cd was dominated by the entropy of Cd adsorption onto the organic fraction. The formation of a type-B HA bridging complex >FeOH-HACOOCdOH enhanced Cd adsorption by 10-30% at low Cd concentrations, and more than 93.5% of the adsorbed Cd was bound onto HA fraction. In ternary systems, the component additivity over-estimated Cd adsorption onto bacteria by similar to 21.8%, likely due to site blocking effects. Models involving the masking of phosphoryl sites and HA bridging reactions can simulate the distribution of Cd in the composites. Our modelling suggests that HA is the main scavenger of Cd under a range of environmental conditions, and that bacteria become important in affecting the distribution of Cd under lower pH settings. This study demonstrates the impact of iron oxide-HA-bacteria interactions on the fate and distribution of Cd in soils and associated environments.

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