Magnetite Stoichiometry
(Fe(II)/Fe(III)) Controls
on Trivalent Chromium Surface Speciation
Posted on 2025-03-17 - 10:29
While the elimination of the most toxic form of chromium
(Cr(VI))
by its reduction to Cr(III) at the magnetite (Fe3O4) surface has widely been documented, elucidating the exact
mechanism involved in Cr(III) sorption to magnetite has attracted
less attention. Indeed, magnetite stoichiometry (R = Fe(II)/Fe(III))
is rarely controlled or monitored in Cr-magnetite interaction studies,
although it was shown to affect not only redox transformation but
also adsorption mechanisms of several contaminants. This study examined
the interaction of 20 μM (∼1 mg L–1) Cr(III) with 10 nm magnetites, whose stoichiometries were carefully
defined (0.1 ≤ R ≤ 0.5) and preserved under anaerobic
conditions in 10 mM NaCl. X-ray absorption spectroscopy showed the
formation of a tridentate trinuclear inner-sphere surface complex,
but it occurred only on oxidized magnetite (R0.1) or on stoichiometric
magnetite (R0.5) under acidic conditions, where H+-promoted
dissolution generated an Fe(II)-depleted surface. When magnetite stoichiometry
increased, Cr surface speciation evolved in favor of a [Fe2+Crx3+Fe3+1–x]OhFeTd3+O4-like solid solution in which Cr(III) partially
substitutes Fe(III) in octahedral sites. This study reveals the joint
effects of pH and magnetite stoichiometry on the Cr(III) sorption
mechanism, demonstrating that Cr(III)-(hydr)oxide precipitation is
not necessarily the driving process of Cr(III) elimination from solutions.
These results will help predict the fate and transport of chromium
as well as develop magnetite-based chromium remediation processes.