Sorption of strontium by bacteria, fe(III) oxide, and bacteria - Fe(III) oxide composites

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Abstract

This study provides the first quantitative comparison of the sorptive capacities of a bacteria-Fe oxide composite to its individual components. These results have enormous significance for understanding the fate and transport of inorganic contaminants in natural aqueous environments where heterogeneous bacteria-oxide composite solids are commonly found. We quantify Sr2+ sorption to the bacteria Shewanella alga, Shewanella putrefaciens, amorphous hydrous ferric oxide (HFO), and S. alga coated with HFO over a range of total Sr2+ concentrations (0.005-10 mM) and pH (2.5-11 at 0.5 pH increments), under well controlled laboratory conditions. Significant Sr2+ sorption occurred at significantly lower pH values to the bacteria and S. alga - HFO composite (5.5-5.9) compared to HFO (7.6). Geochemical modeling using a generalized Langmuir equation showed that the bacteria sorb significantly greater quantities of Sr2+ (maximum sorptive capacity: BSr(max) = 0.079 and 0.075 mmol·g-1 for S. alga and S. putrefaciens, respectively) than the HFO (0.001 mmol·g-1). The observed BSr(max) for the S. alga-HFO composite (0.034 mmol·g-1) was less than the combined sorptive properties of its components (BSr(max) = 0.041 mmol·g-1), likely reflecting HFO masking of bacterial surface binding sites.

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Small, T. D., Warren, L. A., Roden, E. E., & Ferris, F. G. (1999). Sorption of strontium by bacteria, fe(III) oxide, and bacteria - Fe(III) oxide composites. Environmental Science and Technology, 33(24), 4465–4470. https://doi.org/10.1021/es9905694

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