Arsenic thermodynamic data and environmental geochemistry

  • Nordstrom D
  • Archer D
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Abstract

Thermodynamic data are critical as input to models that attempt to interpret the geochemistry of environmentally important elements such as arsenic. Unfortunately, the thermodynamic data for mineral phases of arsenic and their solubilities have been highly discrepant and inadequately evaluated. This paper presents the results of a simultaneous weighted least-squares multiple regression on more than 75 thermochemical measurements of elemental arsenic, arsenic oxides, arsenic sulfides, their aqueous hydrolysis, and a few related reactions. The best-fitted thermodynamic database is related to mineral stability relationships for native arsenic, claudetite, arsenolite, orpiment, and realgar with pε-pH diagrams and with known occurrences and mineral transformations in the environment to test the compatibility of thermodynamic measurements and calculations with observations in nature. The results provide a much more consistent framework for geochemical modeling and the interpretation of geochemical processes involving arsenic in the environment.

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Nordstrom, D. K., & Archer, D. G. (2003). Arsenic thermodynamic data and environmental geochemistry. In Arsenic in Ground Water (pp. 1–25). Springer US. https://doi.org/10.1007/0-306-47956-7_1

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