Stability constants for silicate adsorbed to ferrihydrite

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Stability constants for silicate adsorbed to ferrihydrite. / Hansen, Hans Christian Bruun; Wetche, T.P.; Raulund-Rasmussen, Karsten; Borggaard, Ole Kragholm.

In: Clay Minerals, Vol. 29, No. 3, 1994, p. 341-350.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hansen, HCB, Wetche, TP, Raulund-Rasmussen, K & Borggaard, OK 1994, 'Stability constants for silicate adsorbed to ferrihydrite', Clay Minerals, vol. 29, no. 3, pp. 341-350.

APA

Hansen, H. C. B., Wetche, T. P., Raulund-Rasmussen, K., & Borggaard, O. K. (1994). Stability constants for silicate adsorbed to ferrihydrite. Clay Minerals, 29(3), 341-350.

Vancouver

Hansen HCB, Wetche TP, Raulund-Rasmussen K, Borggaard OK. Stability constants for silicate adsorbed to ferrihydrite. Clay Minerals. 1994;29(3):341-350.

Author

Hansen, Hans Christian Bruun ; Wetche, T.P. ; Raulund-Rasmussen, Karsten ; Borggaard, Ole Kragholm. / Stability constants for silicate adsorbed to ferrihydrite. In: Clay Minerals. 1994 ; Vol. 29, No. 3. pp. 341-350.

Bibtex

@article{f743c770a1c011ddb6ae000ea68e967b,
title = "Stability constants for silicate adsorbed to ferrihydrite",
abstract = "Intrinsic surface acidity constants (K(a1)intr, K(a2)intr) and surface complexation constant for adsorption of orthosilicate onto synthetic ferrihydrite (K(Si) for the complex = FeOSi(OH)3) have been determined from acid/base titrations in 0.001-0.1 m NaClO4 electrolytes and silicate adsorption experiments in 0.01 m NaNO3 electrolyte (pH 3-6). The surface equilibrium constants were calculated according to the two-layer model by Dzombak & Morel (1990). Near equilibrium between protons/hydroxyls in solution and the ferrihydrite surface was obtained within minutes while equilibration with silicate required days-weeks, both reactions probably being diffusion controlled. Applying the values for specific surface area and site densities for ferrihydrite used by Dzombak & Morel (1990) (600 m2 g-1, 3.4 mumole m-2) the constants pK(al)intr 6.93 +/- 0.12, pK(a2)intr = 8.72 +/- 0.17 and log K(Si) = 3.62 were calculated by using the FITEQL optimization routine. Use of the specific surface area actually measured (269 m2 g-1) gave a poorer fit of the experimental data. Due to the slow adsorption of silicate and hence long shaking times, changes in the surface characteristics of the ferrihydrite seem to take place, probably a decrease in the concentration of surface sites. Adsorption isotherms calculated using the derived equilibrium constants showed that approximately twice the amount of silicate was adsorbed at pH 5 compared with pH 3. Infrared spectroscopy of silica adsorbed to ferrihydrite showed Si-O stretching absorption maxima in the range 940-960 cm- 1. The shift of the absorption maximum to higher wavenumbers with increasing amount of silicate adsorbed is probably due to an increase in the frequency of Si-O-Si bonds between orthosilicate adsorbed at adjacent sites. Small amounts of goethite were identified in the adsorption products.",
author = "Hansen, {Hans Christian Bruun} and T.P. Wetche and Karsten Raulund-Rasmussen and Borggaard, {Ole Kragholm}",
year = "1994",
language = "English",
volume = "29",
pages = "341--350",
journal = "Clay Minerals",
issn = "0009-8558",
publisher = "Mineralogical Society",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Stability constants for silicate adsorbed to ferrihydrite

AU - Hansen, Hans Christian Bruun

AU - Wetche, T.P.

AU - Raulund-Rasmussen, Karsten

AU - Borggaard, Ole Kragholm

PY - 1994

Y1 - 1994

N2 - Intrinsic surface acidity constants (K(a1)intr, K(a2)intr) and surface complexation constant for adsorption of orthosilicate onto synthetic ferrihydrite (K(Si) for the complex = FeOSi(OH)3) have been determined from acid/base titrations in 0.001-0.1 m NaClO4 electrolytes and silicate adsorption experiments in 0.01 m NaNO3 electrolyte (pH 3-6). The surface equilibrium constants were calculated according to the two-layer model by Dzombak & Morel (1990). Near equilibrium between protons/hydroxyls in solution and the ferrihydrite surface was obtained within minutes while equilibration with silicate required days-weeks, both reactions probably being diffusion controlled. Applying the values for specific surface area and site densities for ferrihydrite used by Dzombak & Morel (1990) (600 m2 g-1, 3.4 mumole m-2) the constants pK(al)intr 6.93 +/- 0.12, pK(a2)intr = 8.72 +/- 0.17 and log K(Si) = 3.62 were calculated by using the FITEQL optimization routine. Use of the specific surface area actually measured (269 m2 g-1) gave a poorer fit of the experimental data. Due to the slow adsorption of silicate and hence long shaking times, changes in the surface characteristics of the ferrihydrite seem to take place, probably a decrease in the concentration of surface sites. Adsorption isotherms calculated using the derived equilibrium constants showed that approximately twice the amount of silicate was adsorbed at pH 5 compared with pH 3. Infrared spectroscopy of silica adsorbed to ferrihydrite showed Si-O stretching absorption maxima in the range 940-960 cm- 1. The shift of the absorption maximum to higher wavenumbers with increasing amount of silicate adsorbed is probably due to an increase in the frequency of Si-O-Si bonds between orthosilicate adsorbed at adjacent sites. Small amounts of goethite were identified in the adsorption products.

AB - Intrinsic surface acidity constants (K(a1)intr, K(a2)intr) and surface complexation constant for adsorption of orthosilicate onto synthetic ferrihydrite (K(Si) for the complex = FeOSi(OH)3) have been determined from acid/base titrations in 0.001-0.1 m NaClO4 electrolytes and silicate adsorption experiments in 0.01 m NaNO3 electrolyte (pH 3-6). The surface equilibrium constants were calculated according to the two-layer model by Dzombak & Morel (1990). Near equilibrium between protons/hydroxyls in solution and the ferrihydrite surface was obtained within minutes while equilibration with silicate required days-weeks, both reactions probably being diffusion controlled. Applying the values for specific surface area and site densities for ferrihydrite used by Dzombak & Morel (1990) (600 m2 g-1, 3.4 mumole m-2) the constants pK(al)intr 6.93 +/- 0.12, pK(a2)intr = 8.72 +/- 0.17 and log K(Si) = 3.62 were calculated by using the FITEQL optimization routine. Use of the specific surface area actually measured (269 m2 g-1) gave a poorer fit of the experimental data. Due to the slow adsorption of silicate and hence long shaking times, changes in the surface characteristics of the ferrihydrite seem to take place, probably a decrease in the concentration of surface sites. Adsorption isotherms calculated using the derived equilibrium constants showed that approximately twice the amount of silicate was adsorbed at pH 5 compared with pH 3. Infrared spectroscopy of silica adsorbed to ferrihydrite showed Si-O stretching absorption maxima in the range 940-960 cm- 1. The shift of the absorption maximum to higher wavenumbers with increasing amount of silicate adsorbed is probably due to an increase in the frequency of Si-O-Si bonds between orthosilicate adsorbed at adjacent sites. Small amounts of goethite were identified in the adsorption products.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 29

SP - 341

EP - 350

JO - Clay Minerals

JF - Clay Minerals

SN - 0009-8558

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 8028971