JOURNAL ARTICLE

Arsenic(III) Oxidation by Birnessite and Precipitation of Manganese(II) Arsenate

Christophe TournassatLaurent CharletDirk BosbachAlain Manceau

Year: 2002 Journal:   Environmental Science & Technology Vol: 36 (3)Pages: 493-500   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

Solution chemical techniques were used to investigate the oxidation of As(III) to As(V) in 0.011 M arsenite suspension of well-crystallized hexagonal birnessite (H-birnessite, 2.7 g L(-1)) at pH 5. Products of the reaction were studied by scanning electron microscopy coupled with energy dispersive spectroscopy (SEM-EDS), atomic force microscopy (AFM), and X-ray absorption near-edge structure spectroscopy (XANES). In the initial stage (first 74 h), chemical results have been interpreted quantitatively, and the reaction is shown to proceed in two steps as suggested by previous authors: 2>Mn(IV)O2 + H3AsO3 + H2O --> 2>Mn(III)OOH + H2AsO4- + H+ and 2>Mn(III)OOH + H3AsO3 + 3H+ --> 2Mn2+ + H2AsO4- + 2H2O. The As(III) depletion rate was lower (0.02 h(-1)) than measured in previous studies because of the high crystallinity of the H-birnessite sample used in this study. The surface reaction sites are likely located on the edges of H-birnessite layers rather than on the basal planes. The ion activity product of Mn(II) and As(V) reached after 74 h reaction time was the solubility product of a protonated manganese arsenate, having a chemical composition close to that of krautite as identified by XANES and EDS. Krautite precipitation reaction can be written as follows: Mn2+ + H2AsO4- + H2O = MnHAsO4 x H2O + H+ log Ks approximately -0.2. Equilibrium was reached after 400 h. The manganese arsenate precipitate formed long fibers that aggregated at the surface of H-birnessite. The oxidation reaction transforms a toxic species, As(III), to a less toxic aqueous species, which further precipitates with Mn2+ as a mixed As-Mn solid characterized by a low solubility product.

Keywords:
Birnessite Arsenate Manganese Chemistry XANES Arsenite Arsenic Inorganic chemistry Scanning electron microscope Redox Nuclear chemistry Spectroscopy Materials science

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Citation History

Topics

Arsenic contamination and mitigation
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Environmental Chemistry
Geochemistry and Elemental Analysis
Physical Sciences →  Earth and Planetary Sciences →  Geochemistry and Petrology
Clay minerals and soil interactions
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Biomaterials
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