435-7 The Sulfate Local Atomic Environment in Schwertmannite.

Poster Number 1120

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Chemistry
See more from this Session: Advanced Molecular Techniques Characterizing Soil Biogeochemical Processes: III (includes student competition)
Wednesday, November 5, 2014
Long Beach Convention Center, Exhibit Hall ABC
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Xiaoming Wang1, Chunhao Gu2, Xionghan Feng3 and Mengqiang Zhu2, (1)University of Wyoming, Wuhan, (Non U.S.), CHINA
(2)University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY
(3)Huazhong Agricultural University (HAU), Wuhan, Hubei, CHINA
Schwertmannite (Fe8O8(OH)6-x(SO4)x·nH2O) is abundant and plays an important geochemical role in acidic iron- and sulfate-rich environment. Presumably, schwertmannite is a tunneled structure resembling akaganeite but with sulfate ions existing in the tunnels. Thus, sulfate acts as a template ion and stabilizes the tunnel structure. Understanding the role of sulfate requires the sulfate coordination environment, which however is still being debated. In this study, S K-edge EXAFS spectroscopy and X-ray atomic pair distribution function (PDF) analysis were used to determine the S local atomic environment of synthetic wet and air-dried schwertmannite samples. A selenate-version schwertmannite sample synthesized in the presence of sodium selenate was also examined. S EXAFS analysis clearly showed a S-Fe interatomic distance of 3.17 ± 0.05 Å for the air dried S-schwertmannite sample, suggesting that sulfate ions formed a bidentate-binuclear complex. This type of complexes exist in the tunnel of schwertmannite only when the tunnel has defects with missing FeO6 octahedra. In contrast, no second coordination shells were observed for the wet sample, indicating sulfate was mainly put-sphere, probably H-bonded or existing as free sulfate ions under wet conditions. The PDF result shows neither S-Fe nor Se-Fe peaks for the air-dried samples, which may due to their low content and the S and Se binding sites, i.e., the defect sites, are disorderedly distributed in the structure. The results have important implication for understanding schwertmannite structure, formation mechanism, and crystal chemistry.
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Chemistry
See more from this Session: Advanced Molecular Techniques Characterizing Soil Biogeochemical Processes: III (includes student competition)