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  4. Iron Oxyhydroxide Transformation in a Flooded Rice Paddy Field and the Effect of Adsorbed Phosphate

Iron Oxyhydroxide Transformation in a Flooded Rice Paddy Field and the Effect of Adsorbed Phosphate

Author(s)
Katrin Schulz
Worachart Wisawapipat
Kurt Barmettler
Andrew R. C. Grigg
L. Joëlle Kubeneck
Luiza Notini
ThomasArrigo, Laurel  
Labo de chimie environnementale  
Ruben Kretzschmar
Date issued
June 18, 2024
In
Environmental Science & Technology
Vol
58
No
24
From page
10601
To page
10610
Subjects
Fe(II)-catalyzed Mössbauer ferrihydrite iron reduction isotope lepidocrocite microsite
Abstract
The mobility and bioavailability of phosphate in paddy soils are closely coupled to redox-driven Fe-mineral dynamics. However, the role of phosphate during Fe-mineral dissolution and transformations in soils remains unclear. Here, we investigated the transformations of ferrihydrite and lepidocrocite and the effects of phosphate pre-adsorbed to ferrihydrite during a 16-week field incubation in a flooded sandy rice paddy soil in Thailand. For the deployment of the synthetic Fe-minerals in the soil, the minerals were contained in mesh bags either in pure form or after mixing with soil material. In the latter case, the Fe-minerals were labeled with 57Fe to allow the tracing of minerals in the soil matrix with 57Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy. Porewater geochemical conditions were monitored, and changes in the Fe-mineral composition were analyzed using 57Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy and/or X-ray diffraction analysis. Reductive dissolution of ferrihydrite and lepidocrocite played a minor role in the pure mineral mesh bags, while in the 57Fe-mineral-soil mixes more than half of the minerals was dissolved. The pure ferrihydrite was transformed largely to goethite (82-85%), while ferrihydrite mixed with soil only resulted in 32% of all remaining 57Fe present as goethite after 16 weeks. In contrast, lepidocrocite was only transformed to 12% goethite when not mixed with soil, but 31% of all remaining 57Fe was found in goethite when it was mixed with soil. Adsorbed phosphate strongly hindered ferrihydrite transformation to other minerals, regardless of whether it was mixed with soil. Our results clearly demonstrate the influence of the complex soil matrix on Fe-mineral transformations in soils under field conditions and how phosphate can impact Fe oxyhydroxide dynamics under Fe reducing soil conditions.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/100171
DOI
10.1021/acs.est.4c01519
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Schulz_2024_EST_FhLpP Field study.pdf

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