Title of article :
Geochemical and mineralogical investigation of uranium in multi-element contaminated, organic-rich subsurface sediment
Author/Authors :
Qafoku، نويسنده , , Nikolla P. and Gartman، نويسنده , , Brandy N. and Kukkadapu، نويسنده , , Ravi K. and Arey، نويسنده , , Bruce W. and Williams، نويسنده , , Kenneth H. and Mouser، نويسنده , , Paula J. and Heald، نويسنده , , Steve M. and Bargar، نويسنده , , John R. and Janot، نويسنده , , Noémie and Yabusaki، نويسنده , , Steve and Long، نويسنده , , Philip E.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Abstract :
Subsurface regions of alluvial sediments characterized by an abundance of refractory or lignitic organic carbon compounds and reduced Fe and S bearing minerals, which are referred to as naturally reduced zones (NRZ), are present at the Integrated Field Research Challenge site in Rifle, CO (a former U mill site), and other contaminated subsurface sites. A study was conducted to demonstrate that the NRZ contains a variety of contaminants and unique minerals and potential contaminant hosts, investigate micron-scale spatial association of U with other co-contaminants, and determine solid phase-bounded U valence state and phase identity. The NRZ sediment had significant solid phase concentrations of U and other co-contaminants suggesting competing sorption reactions and complex temporal variations in dissolved contaminant concentrations in response to transient redox conditions, compared to single contaminant systems. The NRZ sediment had a remarkable assortment of potential contaminant hosts, such as Fe oxides, siderite, Fe(II) bearing clays, rare solids such as ZnS framboids and CuSe, and, potentially, chemically complex sulfides. Micron-scale inspections of the solid phase showed that U was spatially associated with other co-contaminants. High concentration, multi-contaminant, micron size (ca. 5–30 μm) areas of mainly U(IV) (53–100%) which occurred as biogenic UO2 (82%), or biomass – bound monomeric U(IV) (18%), were discovered within the sediment matrix confirming that biotically induced reduction and subsequent sequestration of contaminant U(VI) via natural attenuation occurred in this NRZ. A combination of assorted solid phase species and an abundance of redox-sensitive constituents may slow U(IV) oxidation rates, effectively enhancing the stability of U(IV) sequestered via natural attenuation, impeding rapid U flushing, and turning NRZs into sinks and long-term, slow-release sources of U contamination to groundwater.
Journal title :
Applied Geochemistry
Journal title :
Applied Geochemistry