| Literature DB >> 31634806 |
Lucie Stetten1, Pierre Lefebvre2, Pierre Le Pape2, Arnaud Mangeret3, Pascale Blanchart3, Pauline Merrot2, Jessica Brest2, Anthony Julien3, John R Bargar4, Charlotte Cazala3, Guillaume Morin2.
Abstract
Reducing conditions and high organic carbon content make wetlands favorable to uranium (U) sequestration. However, such environments are subjected to water-table fluctuations that could impact the redox behavior of U and its mobility. Our previous study on U speciation in a contaminated wetland has suggested a major role of water-table redox fluctuations in the redistribution of U from U(IV)-phosphate minerals to organic U(VI) and U(IV) mononuclear species. Here, we investigate the mechanisms of these putative processes by mimicking drying or flooding periods via laboratory incubations of wetland samples. LCF-XANES and EXAFS analyses show the total oxidation/reduction of U(IV)/U(VI)-mononuclear species after 20 days of oxic/anoxic incubation, whereas U-phosphate minerals are partly oxidized/reduced. SEM-EDXS combined with μ-XRF and μ-XANES analyses suggest that autunite Ca(UO2)2(PO4)2⋅11H2O is reduced into lermontovite U(PO4)(OH)⋅H2O, whereas oxidized ningyoite CaU(PO4)2⋅2H2O is locally dissolved. The release of U from this latter process is observed to be limited by U(VI) adsorption to the soil matrix and further re-reduction into mononuclear U(IV) upon anoxic cycling. Analysis of incubation waters show, however, that dissolved organic carbon enhances U solubilization even under anoxic conditions. This study brings important information that help to assess the long-term stability of U in seasonally saturated organic-rich contaminated environments.Entities:
Keywords: Redox transformations; Soil incubation; Uranium; Wetland; X-ray absorption spectroscopy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31634806 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2019.121362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hazard Mater ISSN: 0304-3894 Impact factor: 10.588