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Center for Biofilm Engineering
Abstract:
"Uranium Complexes Formed at Hematite Surfaces Colonized by
Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria"
04-015 Modeling uranium (U) transport in subsurface environments requires a thorough
knowledge of mechanisms likely to restrict its mobility, such as surface
complexation, precipitation, and colloid formation. In closed systems,
sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) such as Desulfovibrio spp. demonstrably
affect U immobilization by enzymatic reduction of U(VI) species (primarily the
uranyl ion, UO22+, and its complexes) to U(IV). However,
our understanding of such interactions under chronic U(VI) exposure in dynamic
systems is limited. As a first step to understanding such interactions, we
performed bioreactor experiments under continuous flow to study the effect of a
biofilm of the sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio desulfuricans
attached to specular hematite ( -Fe2O3)
surfaces on surface-associated U(VI) complexation, transformation, and mobility.
Employing real-time microscopic observation and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy
(XPS), we show that the characteristics of the U(VI) complex(es) formed at the
hematite surface are influenced by the composition of the bulk aqueous phase
flowing across the surface and by the presence of surface-associated SRB. The
XPS data further suggest higher levels of U associated with hematite surfaces
colonized by SRB than with bacteria-free surfaces. Microscopic observations
indicate that at least a portion of the U(VI) that accumulates in the presence
of the SRB is exterior to the cells, possibly associated with the extracellular
biofilm matrix. The U4f7/2 core-region spectrum and U5f2
valence-band spectrum provide preliminary evidence that the SRB-colonized
hematite surface accumulates both U(VI) and U(IV) phases, whereas only the U(VI)
phase(s) accumulates on uncolonized hematite surfaces. The results suggest that
mineral surfaces exposed to a continuously replenished supply of U(VI)-containing
aqueous phase will accumulate U phases that may be more representative of those
that exist in U-contaminated aquifers than those which accumulate in closed
experimental systems. These phases should be considered in models attempting to
predict U transport through subsurface environments.
Neal, A.L., J.E. Amonette, B.M. Peyton, and G.G. Geesey, "Uranium Complexes
Formed at Hematite Surfaces Colonized by Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria," Environ.
Sci. Technol. 38(11):3019-3027 (2004). |
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