Metastability, nanocrystallinity and pseudo-solid solution effects on the understanding of schwertmannite solubility
Loading...
Publication date
Advisors
Research group
Center
Abstract
The role of metastable nanocrystalline precursors, like schwertmannite, in iron and sulfate rich acidic waters is
commonly underestimated or even neglected. In addition to schwertmannite metastability, its heterogeneous
chemical composition and the current use of disparate solubility products result in an incongruous
understanding of this mineral. In order to characterize schwertmannite stability in acid mine drainage settings,
we used coincident schwertmannite and solution samples to determine how its solubility product is related to
its composition. The solubility products (as log Ksp) for 30 natural samples of this study span a range of log Ksp
values from 5.8 to 39.5. These values show a gradual distribution on the pH–pe space from pH 1.93 to 4.71 and
pe values from8.5 to 13.7. A set of three predictive equations to select the best schwertmannite solubility product
for each new specific case study was obtained. This approximation allows generating an appropriate solubility
product for schwertmannite despite the lack of information in certain environments (e.g., absence of former
water chemistries on Mars). The trend observed for Fe and S contents in schwertmannite can be interpreted as
a pseudo-solid solution ranging from high to low S and Fe concentrations. The polyphasic nature of
schwertmannite was studied by means of a thermodynamic model assuming equilibrium between a hydrous
ferric oxide (HFO), schwertmannite, and solution. All the results obtained in this study support the
understanding of schwertmannite as a polyphasic nanomineral and encourage using a broad log Ksp range to
model the solubility of schwertmannite in nature
Unesco Subjects
Bibliographic citation
Caraballo, M. A., Rimstidt, J. D., Macías, F., Nieto, J. M., & Hochella, M. F., Jr. (2013). Metastability, nanocrystallinity and pseudo-solid solution effects on the understanding of schwertmannite solubility. In Chemical Geology (Vols. 360–361, pp. 22–31). Elsevier BV. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2013.09.023














