Web Release Date: March 2,
Arsenate Adsorption Mechanisms at the Allophane-Water Interface


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United States Geological Survey, MS 465 Middlefield Road, Menlo Park, California 94025, and Department of Plant and Soil Sciences, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19717
Received for review August 24, 2004
Revised manuscript received December 8, 2004
Accepted January 24, 2005
Abstract:
We investigated arsenate (As(V)) reactivity and surface
speciation on amorphous aluminosilicate mineral (synthetic
allophane) surfaces using batch adsorption experiments,
powder X-ray diffraction (XRD), and X-ray absorption
spectroscopy (XAS). The adsorption isotherm experiments
indicated that As(V) uptake increased with increasing [As(V)]o from 50 to 1000
M (i.e., Langmuir type adsorption
isotherm) and that the total As adsorption slightly decreased
with increasing NaCl concentrations from 0.01 to 0.1 M.
Arsenate adsorption was initially (0-10 h) rapid followed
by a slow continuum uptake, and the adsorption processes
reached the steady state after 720 h. X-ray absorption
spectroscopic analyses suggest that As(V) predominantly
forms bidentate binuclear surface species on aluminum
octahedral structures, and these species are stable up to
11 months. Solubility calculations and powder XRD
analyses indicate no evidence of crystalline Al-As(V)
precipitates in the experimental systems. Overall, macroscopic
and spectroscopic evidence suggest that the As(V)
adsorption mechanisms at the allophane-water interface
are attributable to ligand exchange reactions between As(V) and surface-coordinated water molecules and hydroxyl
and silicate ions. The research findings imply that
dissolved tetrahedral oxyanions (e.g., H2PO42- and H2AsO42-)
are readily retained on amorphous aluminosilicate
minerals in aquifer and soils at near neutral pH. The inner-sphere adsorption mechanisms might be important in
controlling dissolved arsenate and phosphate in amorphous
aluminosilicate-rich low-temperature geochemical
environments.
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