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Effect of Microbial Biomass and Humic Acids on Abiotic and Biotic Magnetite Formation
- Source :
- Han, X, Tomaszewski, E J, Sorwat, J, Pan, Y, Kappler, A & Byrne, J M 2020, ' Effect of Microbial Biomass and Humic Acids on Abiotic and Biotic Magnetite Formation ', Environmental Science and Technology, vol. 54, 7, pp. 4121-4130 . https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.9b07095
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Magnetite (Fe3O4) is an environmentally ubiquitous mixed-valent iron (Fe) mineral, which can form via biotic or abiotic transformation of Fe(III) (oxyhydr)oxides such as ferrihydrite (Fh). It is currently unclear whether environmentally relevant biogenic Fh from Fe(II)-oxidizing bacteria, containing cell-derived organic matter, can transform to magnetite. We compared abiotic and biotic transformation: (1) abiogenic Fh (aFh); (2) abiogenic Fh coprecipitated with humic acids (aFh-HA); (3) biogenic Fh produced by phototrophic Fe(II)-oxidizer Rhodobacter ferrooxidans SW2 (bFh); and (4) biogenic Fh treated with bleach to remove biogenic organic matter (bFh-bleach). Abiotic or biotic transformation of Fh was promoted by Feaq2+ or Fe(III)-reducing bacteria. Feaq2+-catalyzed abiotic reaction with aFh and bFh-bleach led to complete transformation to magnetite. In contrast, aFh-HA only partially (68%) transformed to magnetite, and bFh (17%) transformed to goethite. We hypothesize that microbial biomass stabilized bFh against reaction with Feaq2+. All four Fh substrates were transformed into magnetite during biotic reduction, suggesting that Fh remains bioavailable even when associated with microbial biomass. Additionally, there were poorly ordered magnetic components detected in the biogenic end products for aFh and aFh-HA. Nevertheless, abiotic transformation was much faster than biotic transformation, implying that initial Feaq2+ concentration, passivation of Fh, and/or sequestration of Fe(II) by bacterial cells and associated biomass play major roles in the rate of magnetite formation from Fh. These results improve our understanding of factors influencing secondary mineralization of Fh in the environment.
- Subjects :
- Biogeochemical cycle
Goethite
010501 environmental sciences
Ferric Compounds
01 natural sciences
Mineralization (biology)
chemistry.chemical_compound
Ferrihydrite
Environmental Chemistry
Organic matter
Biomass
Humic Substances
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Magnetite
Abiotic component
chemistry.chemical_classification
Minerals
Phototroph
biogenic ferrihydrite
General Chemistry
Ferrosoferric Oxide
chemistry
Environmental chemistry
visual_art
visual_art.visual_art_medium
secondary mineral transformation
Oxidation-Reduction
biogeochemical cycling
magnetic susceptibility
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Han, X, Tomaszewski, E J, Sorwat, J, Pan, Y, Kappler, A & Byrne, J M 2020, ' Effect of Microbial Biomass and Humic Acids on Abiotic and Biotic Magnetite Formation ', Environmental Science and Technology, vol. 54, 7, pp. 4121-4130 . https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.9b07095
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....cd2382a9645c2c201ac08e1e078f080b
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.9b07095