Ligand-Induced U Mobilization from Chemogenic Uraninite and Biogenic Noncrystalline U(IV) under Anoxic Conditions

  • Kyle J. Chardi
  • , Anshuman Satpathy
  • , Walter D.C. Schenkeveld
  • , Naresh Kumar
  • , Vincent Noël
  • , Stephan M. Kraemer
  • , Daniel E. Giammar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Microbial reduction of soluble hexavalent uranium (U(VI)) to sparingly soluble tetravalent uranium (U(IV)) has been explored as an in situ strategy to immobilize U. Organic ligands might pose a potential hindrance to the success of such remediation efforts. In the current study, a set of structurally diverse organic ligands were shown to enhance the dissolution of crystalline uraninite (UO2) for a wide range of ligand concentrations under anoxic conditions at pH 7.0. Comparisons were made to ligand-induced U mobilization from noncrystalline U(IV). For both U phases, aqueous U concentrations remained low in the absence of organic ligands (<25 nM for UO2; 300 nM for noncrystalline U(IV)). The tested organic ligands (2,6-pyridinedicarboxylic acid (DPA), desferrioxamine B (DFOB), N,N′-di(2-hydroxybenzyl)ethylene-diamine-N,N′-diacetic acid (HBED), and citrate) enhanced U mobilization to varying extents. Over 45 days, the ligands mobilized only up to 0.3% of the 370 μM UO2, while a much larger extent of the 300 μM of biomass-bound noncrystalline U(IV) was mobilized (up to 57%) within only 2 days (>500 times more U mobilization). This work shows the potential of numerous organic ligands present in the environment to mobilize both recalcitrant and labile U forms under anoxic conditions to hazardous levels and, in doing so, undermine the stability of immobilized U(IV) sources.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)6369-6379
Number of pages11
JournalEnvironmental Science and Technology
Volume56
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - 2022

Keywords

  • U redox speciation
  • chelating ligands
  • dissolution kinetics
  • ion-exchange chromatography
  • mobilization
  • monomeric U(IV)
  • uranium

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