Efficacy of acetate-amended biostimulation for uranium sequestration: Combined analysis of sediment/groundwater geochemistry and bacterial community structure

Systematic flow-through column experiments were conducted using sediments and ground water collected from different subsurface localities at the U.S. Department of Energy's Integrated Field Research Challenge site in Rifle, Colorado. The principal purpose of this study is to gain a better under...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied geochemistry 2017-03, Vol.78 (C), p.172-185
Hauptverfasser: Xu, Jie, Veeramani, Harish, Qafoku, Nikolla P., Singh, Gargi, Riquelme, Maria V., Pruden, Amy, Kukkadapu, Ravi K., Gartman, Brandy N., Hochella, Michael F.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Systematic flow-through column experiments were conducted using sediments and ground water collected from different subsurface localities at the U.S. Department of Energy's Integrated Field Research Challenge site in Rifle, Colorado. The principal purpose of this study is to gain a better understanding of the interactive effects of groundwater geochemistry, sediment mineralogy, and indigenous bacterial community structures on the efficacy of uranium removal from the groundwater with/without acetate amendment. Overall, we find that the subtle variations in the sediments' mineralogy, redox conditions, as well as contents of metal(loid) co-contaminants showed a pronounced effect on the associated bacterial population and composition, which mainly determines the system's performance with respect to uranium removal. Positive relationship was identified between the abundance of dissimilatory sulfate-reduction genes (i.e., drsA), markers of sulfate-reducing bacteria, and the sediments' propensity to sequester aqueous uranium. In contrast, no obvious connections were observed between the abundance of common iron-reducing bacteria, e.g., Geobacter spp., and the sediments' ability to sequester uranium. In the sediments with low bacterial biomass and the absence of sulfate-reducing conditions, abiotic adsorption onto mineral surfaces such as phyllosilicates likely played a relatively major role in the attenuation of aqueous uranium; however, in these scenarios, acetate amendment induced detectable rebounds in the effluent uranium concentrations. The results of this study suggest that immobilization of uranium can be achieved under predominantly sulfate-reducing conditions, and provide insight into the integrated roles of various biogeochemical components in long-term uranium sequestration. •Uranium bioremediation were mimicked and studied in flow-through column experiments.•Groundwater/sediment geochemistry has direct influence over subsurface bacterial communities.•Sulfate-reducing conditions are most inductive for uranium immobilization.•Acetate-amendment of the sediments did not lead to enhanced uranium removal exclusively.
ISSN:0883-2927
1872-9134
DOI:10.1016/j.apgeochem.2016.12.024