Randhir P Deo, Bruce E Rittmann, Donald T Reed
Chemistry Department, Division of Natural Sciences, College of Natural and Applied Sciences, University of Guam, Mangilao, Guam, USA. rdeo@uguam.uog.edu
Biodegradation 2011 SepPlutonium (Pu), a key contaminant at sites associated with the manufacture of nuclear weapons and with nuclear-energy wastes, can be precipitated to "immobilized" plutonium phases in systems that promote bioreduction. Ferric iron (Fe(3+)) is often present in contaminated sites, and its bioreduction to ferrous iron (Fe(2+)) may be involved in the reduction of Pu to forms that precipitate. Alternately, Pu can be reduced directly by the bacteria. Besides Fe, contaminated sites often contain strong complexing ligands, such as nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA). We used biogeochemical modeling to interpret the experimental fate of Pu in the absence and presence of ferric iron (Fe(3+)) and NTA under anaerobic conditions. In all cases, Shewanella alga BrY (S. alga) reduced Pu(V)(PuO(2) (+)) to Pu(III), and experimental evidence indicates that Pu(III) precipitated as PuPO(4(am).) In the absence of Fe(3+) and NTA, reduction of PuO(2) (+) was directly biotic, but modeling simulations support that PuO(2) (+) reduction in the presence of Fe(3+) and NTA was due to an abiotic stepwise reduction of PuO(2) (+) to Pu(4+), followed by reduction of Pu(4+) to Pu(3+), both through biogenically produced Fe(2+). This means that PuO(2) (+) reduction was slowed by first having Fe(3+) reduced to Fe(2+). Modeling results also show that the degree of PuPO(4(am)) precipitation depends on the NTA concentration. While precipitation out-competes complexation when NTA is present at the same or lower concentration than Pu, excess NTA can prevent precipitation of PuPO(4(am)).
Randhir P Deo, Bruce E Rittmann, Donald T Reed. Bacterial Pu(V) reduction in the absence and presence of Fe(III)-NTA: modeling and experimental approach. Biodegradation. 2011 Sep;22(5):921-9
PMID: 21234648
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