Uranium Reduction in Sediments under Diffusion-Limited Transport of Organic Carbon

Costly disposal of uranium (U) contaminated sediments is motivating research on in situ U(VI) reduction to insoluble U(IV) via directly or indirectly microbially mediated pathways. Delivery of organic carbon (OC) into sediments for stimulating U bioreduction is diffusion-limited in less permeable re...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & technology 2005-09, Vol.39 (18), p.7077-7083
Hauptverfasser: Tokunaga, Tetsu K, Wan, Jiamin, Pena, Jasquelin, Brodie, Eoin L, Firestone, Mary K, Hazen, Terry C, Sutton, Steve R, Lanzirotti, Antonio, Newville, Matthew
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Costly disposal of uranium (U) contaminated sediments is motivating research on in situ U(VI) reduction to insoluble U(IV) via directly or indirectly microbially mediated pathways. Delivery of organic carbon (OC) into sediments for stimulating U bioreduction is diffusion-limited in less permeable regions of the subsurface. To study OC-based U reduction in diffusion-limited regions, one slightly acidic and another calcareous sediment were treated with uranyl nitrate, packed into columns, then hydrostatically contacted with tryptic soy broth solutions. Redox potentials, U oxidation state, and microbial communities were well correlated. At average supply rates of 0.9 μmol OC (g sediment)-1 day-1, the U reduction zone extended to only about 35−45 mm into sediments. The underlying unreduced U(VI) zone persisted over 600 days because the supply of OC was diffusion-limited and metabolized within a short distance. These results also suggest that low U concentrations in groundwater samples from OC-treated sediments are not necessarily indicative of pervasive U reduction because interior and exterior regions of such sediment blocks can contain primarily U(VI) and U(IV), respectively.
ISSN:0013-936X
1520-5851
DOI:10.1021/es050221a