Title of article
Ferrous iron oxidation rates in the pycnocline of a permanently stratified lake Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Sergi D?ez، نويسنده , , Gregory O. Noonan، نويسنده , , John K. MacFarlane، نويسنده , , Peter Shanahan and Philip M. Gschwend.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
10
From page
1561
To page
1570
Abstract
Ferrous iron was found year round at 2–4 mM in the anoxic hypolimnion of the Halls Brook Holding Area (HBHA), a small lake in eastern Massachusetts. Oxygenated epilimnion waters always had total iron concentrations of <80 nanomolar, implying nearly complete oxidation of ferrous iron as it mixed upward across the lake’s pycnocline. Assuming conductivity was a conservative parameter, and using data on the lake’s water balance, upward advection rates (0.02–0.05 m d−1) and vertical eddy diffusion coefficients (0.007–0.05 m2 d−1) were determined for the lake’s pycnocline on five dates. Using the same advection and diffusion parameters, corresponding pseudo first-order rate coefficients for ferrous iron oxidation, kox (s−1), on those dates were calculated (0.0004–0.007 s−1). The values of kox (s−1) were always too large to reflect only homogeneous solution reactions; and on at least four dates they appeared too fast to be due to heterogeneous catalysis on iron oxyhydroxides. This suggested that ferrous iron oxidation in this lake’s pycnocline was primarily due to catalysis by microorganisms, and this was supported by comparison of azide-poisoned vs. untreated batch tests. As a result of their continuous production, iron oxyhydroxide precipitates and any associated sorbates/coprecipitates are most likely continuously settling back into the lake’s deep water and bed sediments, except when episodic storm events flush these solids out of the pycnocline and downstream via the Aberjona River.
Keywords
Oxidation , Iron , Pycnocline
Journal title
Chemosphere
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Chemosphere
Record number
724679
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