Effect of cadmium sulphide precipitation on the partitioning of Cd isotopes: Implications for the oceanic Cd cycle

The biogeochemical cycling of cadmium (Cd) and its isotopes in the surface ocean is dominated by biological uptake into phytoplankton, while regeneration of the sinking particulate Cd governs the shapes of Cd profiles in the deeper ocean. Additionally, the water mass circulation plays an important r...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Earth and planetary science letters 2018-09, Vol.498, p.300-308
Hauptverfasser: Guinoiseau, Damien, Galer, Stephen J.G., Abouchami, Wafa
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:The biogeochemical cycling of cadmium (Cd) and its isotopes in the surface ocean is dominated by biological uptake into phytoplankton, while regeneration of the sinking particulate Cd governs the shapes of Cd profiles in the deeper ocean. Additionally, the water mass circulation plays an important role in the redistribution of Cd and its isotopes. Superimposed on this general cycle, it has recently been argued that cadmium sulphide (CdS) precipitation can occur in oceanic Oxygen Deficient Zones (ODZ). This has been proposed to account for the decrease in Cd/PO4 ratios and the positive Cd isotope excursion in seawater compared to sinking particles. To assess whether CdS precipitation results in a fractionation of Cd isotopes, we performed cadmium–sulphide precipitation experiments under controlled low-oxygen conditions in low (pure water) and high ionic strength (synthetic seawater) water, with variable reaction times and cadmium/sulphide ratios. Enrichment in light Cd isotopes is systematically observed in the precipitated CdS phase, in agreement with recent ab initio simulations of isotope effects associated with Cd speciation in aqueous solution. Our experimental results follow a closed-system Rayleigh fractionation model with the fractionation factor (αCdsol-CdS) for 112Cd/110Cd decreasing with increasing salinity – from 1.00026 for pure water to 1.00014 for a salinity twice that of modern seawater, indicating a salinity control on the magnitude of Cd isotope fractionation. We propose that this fractionation, varying with salinity, is controlled by isotope equilibrium between the various Cd aqueous species present in solution, with preferential involvement of free Cd2+ ion in CdS formation. The magnitude of Cd isotope fractionation in seawater (αCdsol-CdS = 1.00016) determined in our study is in accord with the Cd isotope shift observed in modern oceanic ODZ and attributed to removal by CdS. Our experiments show that CdS precipitation could have significant local impact on the cycling of Cd, and further demonstrates the utility of Cd isotopes as tracers of the sequestration of cadmium into sulphides in restricted euxinic basins, such as the Black Sea. •Cadmium sulphide precipitation enriches the solid in light Cd isotopes.•Cadmium aqueous speciation controls the magnitude of Cd isotope fractionation.•The calculated αCdsol–CdS explains the Cd isotope shift observed in modern oceanic ODZ.•Cadmium isotopes can be used as tracers of the sequestration of cad
ISSN:0012-821X
1385-013X
DOI:10.1016/j.epsl.2018.06.039