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Original Articles

Progressive Sorption and Oxidation/Hydrolysis of Fe(II) Affects Cadmium Immobilization by Bacteria-Iron Oxide Composites

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Pages 11-22 | Received 30 Sep 2009, Accepted 08 Jan 2010, Published online: 07 Jan 2011
 

Abstract

Iron-bacteria composite suspensions were prepared by exposure of Anoxybacillus flavithermus cells to increasing concentrations of Fe2+ cations under different degrees of oxidation. Cd2+ immobilization was investigated during and after the synthesis of the iron-bacteria composites via scanning electron microscopy and isotherm sorption experiments conducted at varied ratios of total iron to bacteria (expressed by the variable ρ, mg Fe per g dry bacteria). At ρ less than about 20, precipitation of Fe(III) oxide was hindered, and for ρ up to about 50 Cd immobilization was decreased relative to iron-free control experiments, even for conditions where Fe(III) oxide was forming. For ρ above 50 to the maximum investigated value of 124, the Cd immobilization capacity of the iron-bacteria composite suspensions was partly recovered. Surface complexation models developed to describe the data indicate that 1) Fe2+ and Cd2+ cations compete with comparable affinities for the reactive sites on the bacterial cell walls, and 2) sorption of the progressively oxidizing iron can reduce the total concentration of bacterial surface sites available for metal adsorption by more than 40%, inferred to be due to masking or blocking of the binding sites by Fe(II) or Fe(III) monomers or oligomers or precipitated Fe(III) oxides. This study demonstrates that the immobilization of metal cations in bacteria-bearing settings cannot be examined independently of redox processes such as the oxidation, hydrolysis and precipitation of iron.

Acknowledgments

We thank Marshall Muller for with assistance with analytical work. This research was funded by the New Zealand Foundation for Research, Science and Technology (Contract C05X0303: Extremophilic Microorganisms for Metal Sequestration from Aqueous Solutions), by the Royal Society of New Zealand Bilateral Research Activities Programme (Contract ISATA07–16), by the CNRS (program “ECCO”), and by the region of Brittany (program “Metalbac”).

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