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Fine scale remobilisation of Fe, Mn, Co, Ni, Cu and Cd in contaminated marine sediment.

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Fine scale remobilisation of Fe, Mn, Co, Ni, Cu and Cd in contaminated marine sediment. / Zhang, Hao; Davison, William; Finke, Niko et al.
In: Marine Chemistry, Vol. 106, No. 1-2, 08.2007, p. 192-207.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Zhang H, Davison W, Finke N, Tankere-Muller S. Fine scale remobilisation of Fe, Mn, Co, Ni, Cu and Cd in contaminated marine sediment. Marine Chemistry. 2007 Aug;106(1-2):192-207. doi: 10.1016/j.marchem.2006.04.005

Author

Zhang, Hao ; Davison, William ; Finke, Niko et al. / Fine scale remobilisation of Fe, Mn, Co, Ni, Cu and Cd in contaminated marine sediment. In: Marine Chemistry. 2007 ; Vol. 106, No. 1-2. pp. 192-207.

Bibtex

@article{444f58f5f09b4774ab3519989f3a253e,
title = "Fine scale remobilisation of Fe, Mn, Co, Ni, Cu and Cd in contaminated marine sediment.",
abstract = "Contaminated sediment from a marine harbour was maintained for 16 months in two flumes that continuously re-circulated the overlying water, sustaining a smooth flow at the sediment surface. The sediment was placed in one flume intact, while for the other it was pre-homogenised. The concentrations of trace metals in the porewaters were measured at a vertical resolution of 2 mm using the technique of diffusive equilibration in thin-films (DET) and microelectrodes were used to measure concentration profiles of oxygen and pH. Separate experiments showed good agreement between metals measured by DET and those measured in porewaters extracted by centrifugation and filtration. Local mobilisation of metals was measured in 2-dimensional arrays by deploying DGT (diffusive gradients in thin-films) probes. There were high concentrations of Fe in the porewaters, which limited the concentration of sulphide to less than 0.3 μM. With both DET and DGT measurements, there were sharply defined maxima of Cu and Cd within 2 mm of the sediment water interface, consistent with their release from organic material as it is oxidised. There was a Co maximum about 5–8 mm lower than the Cu and Cd maxima, apparently coincidental with Mn mobilisation. While there were clear Ni maxima, their location appeared to vary from being coincident with Co to a few mm above the Co maxima. The remobilisation of metals could not be explained by the pH gradients in the near-surface sediments. As sulphate reduction rates were appreciable, the apparent lack of metal mobilisation at depth was attributed to the formation of metal sulphides. The DGT measurements in the same probe were well replicated horizontally. This, the replication of the same features between flumes and the reasonable correspondence between DGT and DET, showed that the localised mobilisation of metals was associated with recent diagenetic processes, rather than the depositional history. There were substantial fluxes of Cu and Cd to the overlying water. Even though there were steep gradients of Fe, Mn, Ni and Co within 1 cm of the sediment–water interface, there was no clear evidence for any substantial metal fluxes across the interface. Adsorption of Mn to Fe oxides, rather than oxidation, may be responsible for its removal from solution at the same depth as Fe.",
keywords = "Trace metals, Marine sediment, DGT, DET, Fluxes",
author = "Hao Zhang and William Davison and Niko Finke and Sophie Tankere-Muller",
note = "Tankere-Muller was a PDRA for a joint EU project between HZ and WD. HZ is corresponding author. Lancaster provided all data with respect to metals, the Bremen laboratory provided the mesocosm and Helsingor the microelectrode data. It is the first examination of metal dynamics in sediments in two dimensions. RAE_import_type : Journal article RAE_uoa_type : Earth Systems and Environmental Sciences",
year = "2007",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1016/j.marchem.2006.04.005",
language = "English",
volume = "106",
pages = "192--207",
journal = "Marine Chemistry",
issn = "0304-4203",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "1-2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Fine scale remobilisation of Fe, Mn, Co, Ni, Cu and Cd in contaminated marine sediment.

AU - Zhang, Hao

AU - Davison, William

AU - Finke, Niko

AU - Tankere-Muller, Sophie

N1 - Tankere-Muller was a PDRA for a joint EU project between HZ and WD. HZ is corresponding author. Lancaster provided all data with respect to metals, the Bremen laboratory provided the mesocosm and Helsingor the microelectrode data. It is the first examination of metal dynamics in sediments in two dimensions. RAE_import_type : Journal article RAE_uoa_type : Earth Systems and Environmental Sciences

PY - 2007/8

Y1 - 2007/8

N2 - Contaminated sediment from a marine harbour was maintained for 16 months in two flumes that continuously re-circulated the overlying water, sustaining a smooth flow at the sediment surface. The sediment was placed in one flume intact, while for the other it was pre-homogenised. The concentrations of trace metals in the porewaters were measured at a vertical resolution of 2 mm using the technique of diffusive equilibration in thin-films (DET) and microelectrodes were used to measure concentration profiles of oxygen and pH. Separate experiments showed good agreement between metals measured by DET and those measured in porewaters extracted by centrifugation and filtration. Local mobilisation of metals was measured in 2-dimensional arrays by deploying DGT (diffusive gradients in thin-films) probes. There were high concentrations of Fe in the porewaters, which limited the concentration of sulphide to less than 0.3 μM. With both DET and DGT measurements, there were sharply defined maxima of Cu and Cd within 2 mm of the sediment water interface, consistent with their release from organic material as it is oxidised. There was a Co maximum about 5–8 mm lower than the Cu and Cd maxima, apparently coincidental with Mn mobilisation. While there were clear Ni maxima, their location appeared to vary from being coincident with Co to a few mm above the Co maxima. The remobilisation of metals could not be explained by the pH gradients in the near-surface sediments. As sulphate reduction rates were appreciable, the apparent lack of metal mobilisation at depth was attributed to the formation of metal sulphides. The DGT measurements in the same probe were well replicated horizontally. This, the replication of the same features between flumes and the reasonable correspondence between DGT and DET, showed that the localised mobilisation of metals was associated with recent diagenetic processes, rather than the depositional history. There were substantial fluxes of Cu and Cd to the overlying water. Even though there were steep gradients of Fe, Mn, Ni and Co within 1 cm of the sediment–water interface, there was no clear evidence for any substantial metal fluxes across the interface. Adsorption of Mn to Fe oxides, rather than oxidation, may be responsible for its removal from solution at the same depth as Fe.

AB - Contaminated sediment from a marine harbour was maintained for 16 months in two flumes that continuously re-circulated the overlying water, sustaining a smooth flow at the sediment surface. The sediment was placed in one flume intact, while for the other it was pre-homogenised. The concentrations of trace metals in the porewaters were measured at a vertical resolution of 2 mm using the technique of diffusive equilibration in thin-films (DET) and microelectrodes were used to measure concentration profiles of oxygen and pH. Separate experiments showed good agreement between metals measured by DET and those measured in porewaters extracted by centrifugation and filtration. Local mobilisation of metals was measured in 2-dimensional arrays by deploying DGT (diffusive gradients in thin-films) probes. There were high concentrations of Fe in the porewaters, which limited the concentration of sulphide to less than 0.3 μM. With both DET and DGT measurements, there were sharply defined maxima of Cu and Cd within 2 mm of the sediment water interface, consistent with their release from organic material as it is oxidised. There was a Co maximum about 5–8 mm lower than the Cu and Cd maxima, apparently coincidental with Mn mobilisation. While there were clear Ni maxima, their location appeared to vary from being coincident with Co to a few mm above the Co maxima. The remobilisation of metals could not be explained by the pH gradients in the near-surface sediments. As sulphate reduction rates were appreciable, the apparent lack of metal mobilisation at depth was attributed to the formation of metal sulphides. The DGT measurements in the same probe were well replicated horizontally. This, the replication of the same features between flumes and the reasonable correspondence between DGT and DET, showed that the localised mobilisation of metals was associated with recent diagenetic processes, rather than the depositional history. There were substantial fluxes of Cu and Cd to the overlying water. Even though there were steep gradients of Fe, Mn, Ni and Co within 1 cm of the sediment–water interface, there was no clear evidence for any substantial metal fluxes across the interface. Adsorption of Mn to Fe oxides, rather than oxidation, may be responsible for its removal from solution at the same depth as Fe.

KW - Trace metals

KW - Marine sediment

KW - DGT

KW - DET

KW - Fluxes

U2 - 10.1016/j.marchem.2006.04.005

DO - 10.1016/j.marchem.2006.04.005

M3 - Journal article

VL - 106

SP - 192

EP - 207

JO - Marine Chemistry

JF - Marine Chemistry

SN - 0304-4203

IS - 1-2

ER -