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Paper Details


Bibliographic Data:


Code: VRL94
Paper Type: Article
Author(s): Van Geen A, Robertson AP, Leckie JO
Title: Complexation of carbonate species at the goethite surface: Implications for adsorption of metal ions in natural waters
Journal: Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
Volume: 58   Year: 1994   Pages: 2073-2086
ISSN-Print: 0016-7037; 0016-1258
Internal Storage: V827
DOI: 10.1016/0016-7037(94)90286-0
Abstract:

Headspace PCo2 was measured with an infrared gas analyzer over an equilibrated goethite suspension to determine adsorption of carbonate species in the pH range 3 to 8. For a 2 g/L goethite suspension in 0.1 N NaClO4 (~3 10−4 M surface sites), the fraction of carbonate species adsorbed increased from 0.15 at pH 3 to a maximum of 0.56 at pH 6. In 0.01 N NaClO4, the fraction of carbonate species adsorbed at pH 6 increased to 0.67. The total concentration of CO2 in the suspension increased from about 0.4 to 0.6 10−4 M in the pH range of these experiments. The development of surface charge at the goethite surface was determined in the pH range 4 to 11 by potentiometric titration under controlled low CO2 conditions. No hysteresis was observed between the acid and base legs of titrations in 0.10, 0.03, and 0.01 N NaClO4 resulting in a pHpzc of 8.9. The carbonate species adsorption data were modelled using the least squares optimization program FITEQL for the diffuse double-layer model and the triplelayer model using stoichiometries of the type Fe-OCOOH and Fe-OCOO for surface bound carbonate species. The model results are consistent with separate experiments showing a significant reduction in chromate adsorption on goethite as the partial pressure of CO2 was increased from <5 to 450 and 40,000 μatm. Our data suggest that mineral oxide surface sites which control solid/solute partitioning of metal ions in natural systems may be largely bound to adsorbed carbonate species.

Comment: very extensive, RAW_GRAPH (raw data presented graphically)

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