Surface chemistry of iron oxide minerals formed in different ionic environments
Date
1999-04-01
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
ORCID
Type
Degree Level
Doctoral
Abstract
The formation of Fe oxides is influenced by pedogenic factors including ionic environments However, the surface chemistry of Fe oxides formed under different ionic conditions remains obscure Tins study reveals the impact of the structural chemistry of the Fe oxides formed under the influence of low-molecular-weight organic acids and inorganic ligands on their surface chemistry. The selected ligands at optimal ligand/Fe(II) molar ratios (MRs) promoted the crystallization of the Fe oxides formed and decreased their specific surface area through fundamental structural changes. At relatively high ligand/Fe(II) MRS, the ligands inhibited the crystallization of the Fe oxides formed, resulting in the development of micropores, the increase in their surface roughness and irregularity as revealed by atomic force microscopy, as well as the increase in their specific surface area. The net negative surface charge of the Fe oxides consistently increased as the ligand/Fe(II) MR increased. The ligands altering the surfaceproperties of the Fe oxides generally followed the order of the stability constants of the Fe-ligand complexes: silicic acid > citrate > tartrate > oxalate > sulfate > carbonate. The kinetics and mechanisms of adsorption/desorption of P and Ph on the Fe oxides formed at various citrate/Fe(II) MRs were investigated by conventional batch method, pressure-jump relaxation spectrometry and differential Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The apparent rate constants, intrinsic rate and equilibrium constants, activation energies, pre-exponential factor values of P and Ph adsorption by the Fe oxides formed and the coordination of P and Ph on the Fe oxide surfaces greatly varied with the amount of the citrate ligands coprecipitated with Fe and their surface properties. The mechanistic rate laws of P and Pb adsorption by the Fe oxides formed at the citrate/Fe(II) MRs of 0 and 0.001 were different. The P adsorption occurred in two sequential reactions whereas the Pb adsorption included two parallel reactions. The role of organic and inorganic ligands in influencing the surface properties of Fe oxides through their effect on crystallization is profound. The subsequent impact on the dynamics of nutrients and pollutants in terrestrial and aquatic environments merits close attention.
Description
Keywords
adsorption, soil science, minerals
Citation
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.)
Department
Soil Science
Program
Soil Science