Chromium oxidation by manganese (hydr)oxides in a California aquifer |
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Authors: | Kuria Ndung’u Stephan Friedrich Ana R Gonzalez A Russell Flegal |
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Institution: | 1. Department of Applied Environmental Science (ITM), Stockholm University, S-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden;2. Advanced Detector Group, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, 7000 East Ave., L-188, Livermore, CA 94550, United States;3. AMEC Geomatrix, Inc., 510 Superior Ave., Suite 200, Newport Beach, CA 92663, United States;4. Environmental Toxicology, WIGS, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, United States |
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Abstract: | There are increasing concerns with elevated levels of Cr(VI) in the environment because it is a strong oxidant, corrosive, and carcinogenic. The concerns extend to the presence of Cr(VI) in many aquifers in California and elsewhere, where relatively high levels have been attributed to both industrial pollution and natural processes. The authors have, therefore, determined if natural redox processes contribute to the presence of high Cr(VI) concentrations (6–36 μg L−1) in an aquifer in central California relative to non-detectable concentrations (<0.1 μg L−1) in an adjacent aquifer. Specifically, the distribution and the redox speciation of dissolved (<0.45 μm) Cr have been compared with those of particulate Mn and Fe oxy-hydroxides in sediments, using X-ray absorption spectroscopy at the Mn and Fe L-edges. The analyses show a correlation between the presence of dissolved Cr(VI) and Mn (hydr)oxide minerals, which are the only common, naturally occurring minerals known to oxidize Cr(III) in laboratory experiments. This covariance substantiates the results of those experiments and previous field studies that indicate natural oxidation mechanisms might account for the relatively high levels of Cr(VI) in the study site, as well as for elevated concentrations in other aquifers with similar biogeochemical conditions. |
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