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  4. Ferrihydrite transformations in flooded paddy soils: rates, pathways, and product spatial distributions

Ferrihydrite transformations in flooded paddy soils: rates, pathways, and product spatial distributions

Author(s)
Andrew R. C. Grigg
ThomasArrigo, Laurel  
Labo de chimie environnementale  
Katrin Schulz
Katherine A. Rothwell
Ralf Kaegi
Ruben Kretzschmar
Date issued
2022
In
Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts
Vol
24
No
10
From page
1867
To page
1882
Abstract
Complex interactions between redox-driven element cycles in soils influence iron mineral transformation processes. The rates and pathways of iron mineral transformation processes have been studied intensely in model systems such as mixed suspensions, but transformation in complex heterogeneous porous media is not well understood. Here, mesh bags containing 0.5 g of ferrihydrite were incubated in five watersaturated paddy soils with contrasting microbial iron-reduction potential for up to twelve weeks. Using X-ray diffraction analysis, we show near-complete transformation of the ferrihydrite to lepidocrocite and goethite within six weeks in the soil with the highest iron(II) release, and slower transformation with higher ratios of goethite to lepidocrocite in soils with lower iron(II) release. In the least reduced soil, no mineral transformations were observed. In soils where ferrihydrite transformation occurred, the transformation rate was one to three orders of magnitude slower than transformation in comparable mixed-suspension studies. To interpret the spatial distribution of ferrihydrite and its transformation products, we developed a novel application of confocal micro-Raman spectroscopy in which we identified and mapped minerals on selected cross sections of mesh bag contents. After two weeks of flooded incubation, ferrihydrite was still abundant in the core of some mesh bags, and as a rim at the mineral–soil interface. The reacted outer core contained unevenly mixed ferrihydrite, goethite and lepidocrocite on the micrometre scale. The slower rate of transformation and uneven distribution of product minerals highlight the influence of biogeochemically complex matrices and diffusion processes on the transformation of minerals, and the importance of studying iron mineral transformation in environmental media.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/62356
DOI
10.1039/d2em00290f
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Ferrihydrite-transformations-in-flooded-paddy-soils-rates-pathways-and-product-spatial-distributions_2022_Royal-Society-of-Chemistry.pdf

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2.68 MB

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