Clays and Clay Minerals, Vol. 54, No. 1, 67-79, 2006.

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Authors

Seabaugh, Jennifer L.
Dong, Hailiang
Kukkadapu, Ravi K.
Eberl, Dennis D.
Morton, John P.
Kim, Jinwook

Issue Date

2006

Type

Article

Language

en_US

Keywords

Periodicals , Geology , CN32 , Fithian , Illite , Microbial Fe(III) Reduction , MoE ssbauer Spectroscopy , Muloorina , Shewanella putrefaciens

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Alternative Title

Microbial Reduction of Fe(III) In The Fithian And Muloorina Illites: Contrasting Extents And Rates Of Bioreduction

Abstract

Shewanella putrefaciens CN32 reduces Fe(III) within two illites which have different properties: the Fithian bulk fraction and the <0.2 mm fraction of Muloorina. The Fithian illite contained 4.6% (w/w) total Fe, 81% of which was Fe(III). It was dominated by illite with some jarosite (~32% of the total Fe(III)) and goethite (11% of the total Fe(III)). The Muloorina illite was pure and contained 9.2% Fe, 93% of which was Fe(III). Illite suspensions were buffered at pH 7 and were inoculated with CN32 cells with lactate as the electron donor. Select treatments included anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS) as an electron shuttle. Bioproduction of Fe(II) was determined by ferrozine analysis. The unreduced and bioreduced solids were characterized by MoÈssbauer spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy. The extent of Fe(III) reduction in the bulk Fithian illite was enhanced by the presence of AQDS (73%) with complete reduction of jarosite and goethite and partial reduction of illite. MoÈssbauer spectroscopy and chemical extraction determined that 21ÿ25% of illite-associated Fe(III) was bioreduced. The extent of bioreduction was less in the absence of AQDS (63%) and only jarosite was completely reduced with partial reduction of goethite and illite. The XRD and TEM data revealed no significant illite dissolution or biogenic minerals, suggesting that illite was reduced in the solid state and biogenic Fe(II) from jarosite and goethite was either released to aqueous solution or adsorbed onto residual solid surfaces. In contrast, only 1% of the structural Fe(III) in Muloorina illite was bioreduced. The difference in the extent and rate of bioreduction between the two illites was probably due to the difference in layer charge and the total structural Fe content between the Fithian illite (0.56 per formula) and Muloorina illite (0.87). There may be other factors contributing to the observed differences, such as expandability, surface area and the arrangements of Fe in the octahedral sheets. The results of this study have important implications for predicting microbe-induced physical and chemical changes of clay minerals in soils and sediments.

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Citation

Clays and Clay Minerals, Vol. 54, No. 1, 67-79, 2006.

Publisher

The Clay Minerals Society

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Copyright © 2006-2018, The Clay Minerals Society

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