JOURNAL ARTICLE

Eu(III)–Fulvic Acid Complexation: Evidence of Fulvic Acid Concentration Dependent Interactions by Time-Resolved Luminescence Spectroscopy

Yasmine KouhailMarc F. BenedettiPascal E. Reiller

Year: 2016 Journal:   Environmental Science & Technology Vol: 50 (7)Pages: 3706-3713   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

Europium speciation is investigated by time-resolved luminescence spectroscopy (TRLS) in the presence of Suwannee River fulvic acid (SRFA). From complexation isotherms built at different total Eu(III) concentrations, pH values, ionic strength, and SRFA concentrations, it appears that two luminescence behaviors of Eu(III) are occurring. The first part, at the lowest CSRFA values, is showing the typical luminescence evolution of Eu(III) complexed by humic substances--that is, the increase of the asymmetry ratio between the (5)D0 → (7)F2 and (5)D0 → (7)F1 transitions up to a plateau--, and the occurrence of a biexponential decay--the first decay being faster than free Eu(3+). At higher CSRFA, a second luminescence mode is detected as the asymmetry ratio is increasing again after the previous plateau, and could correspond to the formation of another type of complex, and/or it can reflect a different spatial organization of complexed europium within the SRFA structure. The luminescence decay keeps on evolving but link to hydration number is not straightforward due to quenching mechanisms. The Eu(III) chemical environment evolution with CSRFA is also ionic strength dependent. These observations suggest that in addition to short-range interactions--intraparticulate complexation--, there might be interactions at longer range--interparticulate repulsion--between particles that are complexing Eu(III) at high CSRFA. These interactions are not yet accounted by the different complexation models.

Keywords:
Fulvic acid Chemistry Luminescence Spectroscopy Inorganic chemistry Environmental chemistry Humic acid Organic chemistry Materials science

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Topics

Radioactive element chemistry and processing
Physical Sciences →  Chemistry →  Inorganic Chemistry
Geochemistry and Elemental Analysis
Physical Sciences →  Earth and Planetary Sciences →  Geochemistry and Petrology
Radioactive contamination and transfer
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Global and Planetary Change
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