Nanoparticles (NPs) often play signi?cant roles in dictating the transport, distribution, bioavailability and toxicity of contaminants in the environment. Incidental NPs (i.e. NPs of anthropogenic origin but not purposely engineered) are often overlooked in contaminant transport and fate studies; yet in many systems they dominate contaminant transport processes. Using sur?cial
contaminated regosols from Trail, British Columbia, Canada, a metal smelting and re?ning area along the banks of the Columbia River, we show that sequestration of Pb-, Zn-, Sb-, and As-bearing incidental NPs is strongly in?uenced by their aggregation, crystal growth, and/or particle
attachment to mineral surface coatings (MSC) and in mineralized organic matter (MOM). Transmission electron microscopy shows the occurrence of NPs of anglesite (PbSO4), Fe– As-phosphate, kintoreite
(Pb[(Fe,Al)3(P(As)O4)(PO3(OH))(OH)6]), and franklinite (ZnFe2O4) in matrices of amorphous silica which retain di?erent stages of their agglomeration and aggregation. Other identi?ed nano-size phases in the MSC and MOM indicate a complex and previously unrecognized mineralogy of Pb-, Zn-, Sb-, and As-phase in sur?cial soils. Mineralogical complexity and the various sequestration processes observed in this study indicate a new dimension of nano-scale processes on mineral surfaces and organic matter that have been previously overlooked when studying the fate of contaminants with bulk-analytical tools such as micro-X-ray di?raction or synchrotron-based spectroscopic methods.
Revised: May 21, 2020 |
Published: October 16, 2017
Citation
Schindler M., and M.F. Hochella. 2017.Sequestration of Pb–Zn–Sb- and As-bearing incidental nanoparticles by mineral surface coatings and mineralized organic matter in soils.Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts 19, no. 8:1016-1027.PNNL-SA-129891.doi:10.1039/c7em00202e