Abstract
The iron(II) oxidation kinetic process was studied at 25 stations in coastal seawater of the Macaronesia region (9 around Cape Verde, 11 around the Canary Islands, and 5 around Madeira). In a physicochemical context, experiments were carried out to study the pseudo-first-order oxidation rate constant (k′, min-1) over a range of pH (7.8, 7.9, 8.0, and 8.1) and temperature (10, 15, 20, and 25 °C). Deviations from the calculated kcal′ at the same T, pH, and S were observed for most of the stations. The measured t1/2 (ln 2/k′, min) values at the 25 stations ranged from 1.82 to 3.47 min (mean 1.93 ± 0.76 min) and for all but two stations were lower than the calculated t1/2 of 3.21 ± 0.2 min. In a biogeochemical context, nutrients and variables associated with the organic matter spectral properties (CDOM and FDOM) were analyzed to explain the observed deviations. The application of a multilinear regression model indicated that k′ can be described (R = 0.921 and SEE = 0.064 for pH = 8 and T = 25 °C) from a linear combination of three organic variables, k′OM = kcal′ −0.11* TDN + 29.9*bDOM + 33.4*C1humic, where TDN is the total dissolved nitrogen, bDOM is the spectral peak obtained from colored dissolved organic matter (DOM) analysis when protein-like or tyrosine-like components are present, and C1humic is the component associated with humic-like compounds obtained from the parallel factor analysis of the fluorescent DOM. Results show that compounds with N in their structures mainly explain the observed k′ increase for most of the samples, although other components could also play a relevant role. Experimentally, k′ provides the net result between the compounds that accelerate the process and those that slow it down.
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Santana-Casiano, J. M., González-Santana, D., Devresse, Q., Hepach, H., Santana-González, C., Quack, B., … González-Dávila, M. (2022). Exploring the Effects of Organic Matter Characteristics on Fe(II) Oxidation Kinetics in Coastal Seawater. Environmental Science and Technology, 56(4), 2718–2728. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.1c04512
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