Sorption and speciation of selenium in boreal forest soil
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2016

Sorption and speciation of selenium in the initial chemical forms of selenite and selenate were investigated in batch experiments on humus and mineral soil samples taken from a 4–m deep boreal forest soil excavator pit on Olkiluoto Island, on the Baltic Sea coast in southwestern Finland. The HPLC–ICP-MS technique was used to monitor any possible transformations in the selenium liquid phase speciation and to determine the concentrations of selenite and selenate in the samples for calculation of the mass distribution coefficient, Kd, for both species. Both SeO3 2− and SeO4 2− proved to be resistant forms in the prevailing soil conditions and no changes in selenium liquid phase speciation were seen in the sorption experiments in spite of variations in the initial selenium species, incubation time or conditions, pH, temperature or microbial activity. Selenite sorption on the mineral soil increased with time in aerobic conditions whilst the opposite trend was seen for the anaerobic soil samples. Selenite retention correlated with the contents of organic matter and weakly crystalline oxides of aluminum and iron, solution pH and the specific surface area. Selenate exhibited poorer sorption on soil than selenite and on average the Kd values were 27–times lower. Mineral soil was more efficient in retaining selenite and selenate than humus, implicating the possible importance of weakly crystalline aluminum and iron oxides for the retention of oxyanions in Olkiluoto soil. Sterilization of the soil samples decreased the retention of selenite, thus implying some involvement of soil microbes in the sorption processes or a change in sample composition, but it produced no effect for selenate. There was no sorption of selenite by quartz, potassium feldspar, hornblende or muscovite. Biotite showed the best retentive properties for selenite in the model soil solution at about pH 8, followed by hematite, plagioclase and chlorite. The Kd values for these minerals were 18, 14, 8 and 7 L/kg, respectively. It is proposed that selenite sorption is affected by the structural Fe(II) in biotite, which is capable of inducing the reduction of SeO3 2− to Se(0). Selenite probably forms a surface complex with Fe(III) atoms on the surface of hematite, thus explaining its retention on this mineral. None of the minerals retained selenate to any extent.

Sorption

Soil

HPLC–ICP-MS

Speciation

Selenite and selenate

Författare

Mervi Söderlund

Helsingin Yliopisto

Juhani Virkanen

Helsingin Yliopisto

Stellan Holgersson

Chalmers, Kemi och kemiteknik, Energi och material

Jukka Lehto

Helsingin Yliopisto

Journal of Environmental Radioactivity

0265-931X (ISSN) 18791700 (eISSN)

Vol. 164 220-231

Ämneskategorier

Markvetenskap

Miljö- och naturvårdsvetenskap

Skogsvetenskap

DOI

10.1016/j.jenvrad.2016.08.006

PubMed

27521902

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Senast uppdaterat

2023-10-16