posted on 2015-12-17, 01:18authored byAndrew L. Rose, Mark W. Bligh, Richard
N. Collins, T. David Waite
Small angle X-ray
scattering (SAXS) measurements coupled to a stopped-flow
device has permitted the observation of the kinetics of Fe(III) oxyhydroxide
(FeOx) formation and transformation from around 1 s to 30 min after
initiation under environmentally relevant conditions at pH 3. The
Unified Model approach was used to determine the evolution of multiple
key parameters (particle scattering mass, mean particle volume, particle
concentration, particle dimensionality, and particle size) for two
separate structural levels as a function of time, with the results
obtained enabling clarification of the mechanisms underlying FeOx
formation and transformation under these conditions. Colloidal primary
particles (radius of gyration 2–10 nm) that were observable
by SAXS formed within 1 s of stopping the flow and subsequently grew
over several minutes, first by cluster–cluster addition and
then by a monomer-addition mechanism. Aggregation of these primary
particles via a secondary cluster–cluster addition mechanism
simultaneously resulted in a distinct population of larger (25–40
nm radius of gyration) secondary particles. The primary particles
evolved into compact spheroidal forms with fractally rough surfaces,
while the secondary particles were relatively open mass fractal structures.
Comparison of the observed rates of these processes with those predicted
for Fe polymerization indicates that kinetics of primary particle
formation were likely controlled initially by rates of exchange between
water molecules coordinated with Fe and those in the bulk solution.
These findings provide new insights into the mechanisms underlying
FeOx formation and transformation, and the kinetics of these mechanisms,
at pH 3.