Gareth T.W. Law

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Organization: The University of Manchester , England
Department: School of Chemistry
Title: Lecture(PhD)
Co-reporter:Nicholas K. Masters-Waage, Katherine Morris, Jonathan R. Lloyd, Samuel Shaw, J. Frederick W. Mosselmans, Christopher Boothman, Pieter Bots, Athanasios Rizoulis, Francis R. Livens, and Gareth T. W. Law
Environmental Science & Technology December 19, 2017 Volume 51(Issue 24) pp:14301-14301
Publication Date(Web):November 16, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.est.7b02426
Technetium is a problematic contaminant at nuclear sites and little is known about how repeated microbiologically mediated redox cycling impacts its fate in the environment. We explore this question in sediments representative of the Sellafield Ltd. site, UK, over multiple reduction and oxidation cycles spanning ∼1.5 years. We found the amount of Tc remobilised from the sediment into solution significantly decreased after repeated redox cycles. X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy (XAS) confirmed that sediment bound Tc was present as hydrous TcO2-like chains throughout experimentation and that Tc’s increased resistance to remobilization (via reoxidation to soluble TcO4–) resulted from both shortening of TcO2 chains during redox cycling and association of Tc(IV) with Fe phases in the sediment. We also observed that Tc(IV) remaining in solution during bioreduction was likely associated with colloidal magnetite nanoparticles. These findings highlight crucial links between Tc and Fe biogeochemical cycles that have significant implications for Tc’s long-term environmental mobility, especially under ephemeral redox conditions.
Co-reporter:Clare L. Thorpe, Katherine Morris, Jonathan R. Lloyd, Melissa A. Denecke, Kathleen A. Law, Kathy Dardenne, Christopher Boothman, Pieter Bots, Gareth T.W. Law
Applied Geochemistry (December 2015) Volume 63() pp:
Publication Date(Web):1 December 2015
DOI:10.1016/j.apgeochem.2015.09.008
•Neptunium is a high radiotoxicity, alpha emitting actinide.•Biostimulation of Mn(IV)-enriched sediments leads to reductive removal of soluble Np(V) from groundwater onto sediments as Np(IV).•Np(V) reduction occurs under defined Mn-reducing conditions.•Under Mn-reducing conditions, enzymatic processes may be important for Np(V) reduction.Understanding the behaviour of the highly radiotoxic, long half-life radionuclide neptunium in the environment is important for the management of radioactively contaminated land and the safe disposal of radioactive wastes. Recent studies have identified that microbial reduction can reduce the mobility of neptunium via reduction of soluble Np(V) to poorly soluble Np(IV), with coupling to both Mn- and Fe(III)- reduction implicated in neptunyl reduction. To further explore these processes Mn(IV) as δMnO2 was added to sediment microcosms to create a sediment microcosm experiment “poised” under Mn-reducing conditions. Enhanced removal of Np(V) from solution occurred during Mn-reduction, and parallel X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) studies confirmed Np(V) reduction to Np(IV) commensurate with microbially-mediated Mn-reduction. Molecular ecology analysis of the XAS systems, which contained up to 0.2 mM Np showed no significant impact of elevated Np concentrations on the microbial population. These results demonstrate the importance of Mn cycling on Np biogeochemistry, and clearly highlight new pathways to reductive immobilisation for this highly radiotoxic actinide.
Neptunium hydroxide
plutonium
Goethite (Fe(OH)O)
dichlorodioxouranium
Brucite (Mg(OH)2)
Technetium, isotope ofmass 99
TECHNETIUM
2-(5,6-DIMETHYL-1H-BENZIMIDAZOL-2-YL)GUANIDINE
Uranium
Sulfate (7CI,8CI,9CI)