In-Situ Magnetic Susceptibility Measurements As a Tool to Follow Geomicrobiological Transformation of Fe Minerals

Fe minerals sorb nutrients and pollutants and participate in microbial and abiotic redox reactions. Formation and transformation of Fe minerals is typically followed by mineral analysis at different time points. However, in lab studies the available sample amount is often limited and sampling may ev...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & technology 2010-05, Vol.44 (10), p.3846-3852
Hauptverfasser: Porsch, Katharina, Dippon, Urs, Rijal, Moti Lal, Appel, Erwin, Kappler, Andreas
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container_end_page 3852
container_issue 10
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container_title Environmental science & technology
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creator Porsch, Katharina
Dippon, Urs
Rijal, Moti Lal
Appel, Erwin
Kappler, Andreas
description Fe minerals sorb nutrients and pollutants and participate in microbial and abiotic redox reactions. Formation and transformation of Fe minerals is typically followed by mineral analysis at different time points. However, in lab studies the available sample amount is often limited and sampling may even influence the experimental conditions. We therefore evaluated the suitability of in situ magnetic susceptibility (MS) measurements, which do not require sampling, as an alternative tool to follow ferro(i)magnetic mineral (trans-)formation during ferrihydrite reduction by Shewanella oneidensis MR-1, and in soil microcosms. In our experiments with MR-1, a large initial increase in volume specific MS (κ) followed by a slight decrease correlated well with the initial formation of magnetite and further reduction of magnetite to siderite as also identified by μ-XRD. The presence of humic acids retarded magnetite formation, and even inhibited magnetite formation completely, depending on their concentration. In soil microcosms, an increase in κ accompanied by increasing concentrations of HCl-extractable Fe occurred only in microbially active set-ups, indicating a microbially induced change in soil Fe mineralogy. Based on our results, we conclude that MS measurements are suitable to follow microbial Fe mineral transformation in pure cultures as well as in complex soil samples.
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In soil microcosms, an increase in κ accompanied by increasing concentrations of HCl-extractable Fe occurred only in microbially active set-ups, indicating a microbially induced change in soil Fe mineralogy. 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source MEDLINE; American Chemical Society Journals
subjects Applied sciences
Chemical reactions
Environmental Measurements Methods
Exact sciences and technology
Geology
Iron
Iron - metabolism
Magnetics
Measurement
Microbiology
Minerals
Oxidation-Reduction
Pollution
Shewanella - metabolism
Soil microorganisms
X-Ray Diffraction
title In-Situ Magnetic Susceptibility Measurements As a Tool to Follow Geomicrobiological Transformation of Fe Minerals
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