TY - JOUR
T1 - Mechanistic Study of Radium Adsorption onto Goethite
AU - Shi, Qiantao
AU - Meng, Xiaoguang
AU - Prigiobbe, Valentina
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2019 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2020/1/9
Y1 - 2020/1/9
N2 - Radium (Ra2+) is a radioactive element with a long half-life. It is used in industry and is often found in shallow aquifers due to natural or anthropogenic leakage or spill of brine from deep subsurface. A major factor influencing the transport and fate of Ra2+ in water is the adsorption/desorption process onto soil particles. Goethite, a ubiquitous natural mineral generally present as a coating of soil particles, contributes significantly to the adsorption of Ra2+ in the subsurface. However, the chemical reactions of adsorption of Ra2+ onto goethite are not well-established, yet. Previous studies reported that Ra2+ creates either tetradentate or monodentate complexes on goethite and no distinction between outer-sphere and inner-sphere types of complexes were made. Knowledge of the type and structure of Ra-goethite surface complexes is important to predict the behavior and the fate of Ra2+ in the subsurface, e.g., upon a spill and during the remediation of a contaminated site. Here, the adsorption of Ra2+ onto goethite is investigated by density functional theory (DFT) calculations. By using a combination of geometric structure, adsorption energy, and electronic state (i.e., density of states and magnetic moment) analyses, the outer-sphere adsorption was found to dominate Ra2+ complexation on goethite, suggesting a significant effect of salinity on Ra2+ transport in the subsurface. Inner-sphere adsorption configuration was not observed to be thermodynamically favorable, resulting from ionic rather than covalent interaction between Ra2+ and goethite. Based on these results, a surface complexation model was developed and validated successfully with literature data. This study provides insights into the mechanism of Ra2+ adsorption on soils containing goethite and provides chemical reactions of Ra-goethite surface interaction that can be coupled with a transport model to predict Ra2+ migration in the subsurface.
AB - Radium (Ra2+) is a radioactive element with a long half-life. It is used in industry and is often found in shallow aquifers due to natural or anthropogenic leakage or spill of brine from deep subsurface. A major factor influencing the transport and fate of Ra2+ in water is the adsorption/desorption process onto soil particles. Goethite, a ubiquitous natural mineral generally present as a coating of soil particles, contributes significantly to the adsorption of Ra2+ in the subsurface. However, the chemical reactions of adsorption of Ra2+ onto goethite are not well-established, yet. Previous studies reported that Ra2+ creates either tetradentate or monodentate complexes on goethite and no distinction between outer-sphere and inner-sphere types of complexes were made. Knowledge of the type and structure of Ra-goethite surface complexes is important to predict the behavior and the fate of Ra2+ in the subsurface, e.g., upon a spill and during the remediation of a contaminated site. Here, the adsorption of Ra2+ onto goethite is investigated by density functional theory (DFT) calculations. By using a combination of geometric structure, adsorption energy, and electronic state (i.e., density of states and magnetic moment) analyses, the outer-sphere adsorption was found to dominate Ra2+ complexation on goethite, suggesting a significant effect of salinity on Ra2+ transport in the subsurface. Inner-sphere adsorption configuration was not observed to be thermodynamically favorable, resulting from ionic rather than covalent interaction between Ra2+ and goethite. Based on these results, a surface complexation model was developed and validated successfully with literature data. This study provides insights into the mechanism of Ra2+ adsorption on soils containing goethite and provides chemical reactions of Ra-goethite surface interaction that can be coupled with a transport model to predict Ra2+ migration in the subsurface.
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U2 - 10.1021/acs.jpcc.9b10451
DO - 10.1021/acs.jpcc.9b10451
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85077445194
SN - 1932-7447
VL - 124
SP - 805
EP - 814
JO - Journal of Physical Chemistry C
JF - Journal of Physical Chemistry C
IS - 1
ER -