| Literature DB >> 29567523 |
Jeison Manuel Arroyave1, Virginia Puccia1, Graciela P Zanini1, Marcelo J Avena2.
Abstract
Phosphate adsorption at the metal oxide-water interface has been intensely studied, and the system phosphate-goethite in aqueous media is normally used as a model system with abundant information regarding adsorption-desorption under very different conditions. In spite of this, there is still discussion on whether the main inner-sphere surface complexes that phosphate forms on goethite are monodentate or bidentate. A new spectroscopic technique, InfraRed Surface Titration (IRST), is presented here and used to systematically explore the surface speciation of phosphate on goethite in the pH range 4.5-9.5 at different surface coverages. IRST enabled to construct distribution curves of surface species and distribution curves of dissolved phosphate species. In combination with the CD-MUSIC surface complexation model it was possible to conclude that surface complexes are monodentate. Very accurate distribution curves were obtained, showing a crossing point at pH5.5 at a surface coverage of 2.0μmolm-2, with a mononuclear monoprotonated species predominating at pH>5.5 and a mononuclear diprotonated species prevailing at pH<5.5. On the contrary, at the low surface coverage of 0.7μmolm-2 there is no crossing point, with the mononuclear monoprotonated species prevailing at all pH. IRST can become a powerful technique to investigate structure, properties and reactions of any IR-active surface complex at the solid-water interface.Entities:
Keywords: IRST; Infrared spectroscopy; Phosphate adsorption; Surface complexes; Surface species distribution
Year: 2018 PMID: 29567523 DOI: 10.1016/j.saa.2018.03.043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Spectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc ISSN: 1386-1425 Impact factor: 4.098