Journal Pre-proof Influence of humic substances on the transport of indium and gallium in porous media Yasmine Kouhail, Nitai Amiel, Ishai Dror, Brian Berkowitz PII:
S0045-6535(20)30292-7
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.126099
Reference:
CHEM 126099
To appear in:
ECSN
Received Date: 12 November 2019 Revised Date:
28 January 2020
Accepted Date: 1 February 2020
Please cite this article as: Kouhail, Y., Amiel, N., Dror, I., Berkowitz, B., Influence of humic substances on the transport of indium and gallium in porous media, Chemosphere (2020), doi: https:// doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.126099. This is a PDF file of an article that has undergone enhancements after acceptance, such as the addition of a cover page and metadata, and formatting for readability, but it is not yet the definitive version of record. This version will undergo additional copyediting, typesetting and review before it is published in its final form, but we are providing this version to give early visibility of the article. Please note that, during the production process, errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. © 2020 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Credit author statement Yasmine Kouhail: Conceptualization, Methodology, Validation, Investigation, Writing and Editing Nitai Amiel: Software, Writing and Editing Ishai Dror: Conceptualization, Methodology, Validation, Writing and Editing, Supervision Brian Berkowitz: Conceptualization, Methodology, Validation, Writing and Editing, Supervision
Column
Fraction collector Pump
Inlet solution In or Ga HS
1 2
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Influence of humic substances on the transport of indium and
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gallium in porous media
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Yasmine Kouhail*, Nitai Amiel, Ishai Dror and Brian Berkowitz
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Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences
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Weizmann Institute of Science
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Rehovot 7610001 Israel
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* Corresponding author:
[email protected]
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Keywords: column experiments, natural organic matter, indium, gallium, mobility
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For submission to: Chemosphere
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Abstract
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Indium and gallium are used widely in modern industry, mostly for the production of semiconductors. They are considered as Technology-Critical Elements and have therefore received growing attention in the past few years. We investigated the influence of different types of humic substances on the transport of indium and gallium in laboratory-scale, saturated column experiments, to gain understanding of their mobility in natural environments. We evaluated the effect of different humic substances on the transport of indium and gallium in quartz sand: a commercial humic acid (Aldrich Humic Acid, AHA), a fulvic acid (Suwannee River Fulvic Acid, SRFA) and an aquatic natural organic matter (Suwannee River Natural Organic Matter, SRNOM). The impact of the flow rate and the influence of different concentrations of organic matter were also investigated. Indium was shown to be more mobile than gallium in the presence of humic substances. The mobility of indium in sand was highest for SRNOM, followed by SRFA and then AHA, while for gallium the order was SRFA > SRNOM > AHA. These results can be significant in understanding the mobility of indium and gallium in soils with various compositions of organic matter.
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34
1
Introduction
35
Indium and gallium have been used widely in industry over the past twenty years and the
36
demand for these elements is increasing. Indium is used mainly in semiconductors as indium tin
37
oxide and in computer and TV screens. Gallium is also used for semiconductor devices, solar
38
panels, LED lamps and in cancer diagnosis (Afshar-Oromieh et al., 2013) and treatment (Collery
39
et al., 2002). These trace metal elements have low abundances in the Earth’s continental crust
40
(0.056 mg/kg for indium and 17.5 mg/kg for gallium (Rudnick and Gao, 2003)) and are not
41
mined directly. Indium is a byproduct of zinc and copper mining, and gallium is recovered mostly
42
from bauxite ores. The European Commission Enterprise and Industry (2010) defined indium and
43
gallium as Technology-Critical Elements (TCEs). Their poor recycling from technological
44
products can lead to environmental pollution. Moreover, the toxicity of indium and gallium from
45
the semiconductor industry on fish and mammals is still a matter of debate (Tanaka, 2004;
46
Olivares et al., 2016; White and Shine, 2016; Nakano et al., 2019). Indium and gallium were
47
shown to be present in agricultural soils in Europe (Reimann et al., 2018) likely due to natural
48
sources. However, anthropogenic sources of indium were also found in Japanese rivers in the
49
Tokyo bay (Nozaki et al., 2000) and in the vicinity of an electronic waste site in Ghana
50
(Tokumaru et al., 2017). Gallium was also found in groundwaters near a semiconductor
51
production site in Taiwan (Chen, 2006).
52
Indium and gallium in solution are present at their +III oxidation state (In(III) and Ga(III)
53
and tend to precipitate as In/Ga(OH)3 due to their low solubility (Wood and Samson, 2006).
54
However in the presence of organic and inorganic ligands, indium and gallium can be present as
55
complexed forms. Speciation studies of indium and gallium in solution are very scarce and
56
limited to complexation with hard inorganic ligands (Wood and Samson, 2006), a few simple 3
57
organic molecules such as citrate, oxalate and malonate (Clausén et al., 2003; Vasca et al., 2003;
58
Clausén et al., 2005; Ivanova et al., 2015; Rotureau et al., 2018) and mineral surfaces such as γ-
59
Al2O3 and clays (Lin et al., 1997; Benedicto et al., 2014). Natural organic matter (NOM) is
60
known to be able to bind trivalent metals such as aluminum (Ryan et al., 1996; Elkins and
61
Nelson, 2001; Weng et al., 2002b) and therefore is expected to impact the behavior of indium and
62
gallium in the environment. However, studies investigating In(III)-NOM and Ga(III)-NOM
63
interactions are to date very scarce and essentially in their infancy (Lippold et al., 2005; Hagvall
64
et al., 2014; Rotureau et al., 2018).
65
In their dissolved colloidal form, humic substances can enhance the transport of metals,
66
while these same substances can retard metal transport when adsorbed on soil mineral. To date,
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only one study has focused on the transport of gallium in sand (Ringering et al., 2019) and four
68
studies have examined indium transport in sand and soil (Hou et al., 2005; Wen et al., 2013;
69
Murata et al., 2018; Ringering et al., 2019). Hou et al. (2005) investigated the transport of In-
70
EDTA and In-citrate in columns filled with different soils. Indium was shown to be very mobile
71
and probably dependent on the presence of organic matter colloids. Murata et al. (2018) and
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Ringering et al. (2019) investigated, respectively, the transport of In-citrate in soil lysimeters for
73
8 years with application of deionized water (to account for precipitation) and the transport of In-
74
citrate in sand column experiments. In both cases, indium was shown to be mobile and influenced
75
by humic acid. However, the effects of humic substances and citrate were not studied separately
76
and competition is expected between these two organic ligands on indium fate in natural
77
environments. In these studies, the influence of citrate and EDTA compared to the effect of
78
organic matter colloids was not discussed, and it is not clear if the mobility of indium is due only
79
to its interactions with small organic molecules or due also to its interactions with natural organic
4
80
matter. Gallium exhibits a different behavior than indium (Ringering et al., 2019) even though
81
they can be expected to have a similar chemistry due to their position – one above the other – in
82
the periodic table. Gallium-citrate was shown to be more mobile than indium-citrate in the
83
absence of humic acid and less mobile in the presence of humic acid.
84
The current study focuses on investigating the influence of natural organic matter on the
85
transport of indium and gallium in sand, without citrate ligands that compete for indium and
86
gallium complexation in solution. This will aid understanding of whether or not the mobility of
87
indium and gallium depends exclusively on its interactions with organic matter, or if different
88
organic matter compositions also affect the mobility of these metals. The effect of different
89
humic substances is investigated: a commercial humic acid (Aldrich Humic Acid, AHA), a fulvic
90
acid (Suwannee River Fulvic Acid, SRFA) and an aquatic natural organic matter (Suwannee
91
River Natural Organic Matter, SRNOM) from the International Humic Substances Society. The
92
impact of flow rate and the influence of different concentrations of organic matter were
93
investigated.
94
95
2
Materials and methods
96
2.1 Materials
97
Indium(III) chloride (InCl3 98%), gallium(III) nitrate hydrate anhydrous basis (Ga(NO3)3
98
H2O 99.9%), sodium bromide (NaBr ≥99.5%), hydrochloric acid (HCl ≥37%), nitric acid (HNO3
99
70%), and Aldrich humic acid (AHA) were purchased from Sigma Aldrich. Suwannee River
100
fulvic acid (SRFA) and Suwannee River organic matter (SRNOM) were purchased from the
5
101
International Humic Substances Society (IHSS, Saint Paul, MN, USA). Quartz sand (30-40 mesh,
102
0.4-0.6 mm) was obtained from Unimin Corporation. The specific surface area of the quartz sand
103
is 0.049 m2 g-1 (Goykhman et al., 2019). An artificial rainwater (ARW) with an ionic strength of
104
6.5 mM was used as a background solution in the transport experiments. The ARW solution is
105
composed of sodium nitrate (NaNO3 >99.5%) purchased from Fluka at 48 mg L-1, potassium
106
carbonate (K2CO3 99%) purchased from Merck at 57.9 mg L-1 and magnesium sulfate (MgSO4
107
99%) purchased from Merck at 35 mg L-1; the pH was fixed at 6 using freshly prepared HCl and
108
NaOH. All solutions were prepared in double deionized water (DDW, 18 MΩ cm-1). The pH of
109
the solutions was measured using Eutech pH 450 pH meter from Thermo Scientific with a
110
combined pH electrode from Sensorex. Buffers (pH 4 and 7) from Rocker were used for pH
111
calibration.
112 113
2.2 Experimental setup
114
The transport of indium and gallium in presence of different extracts of organic matter
115
(AHA, SRFA and SRNOM) was studied in vertical, water-saturated, laboratory column
116
experiments. The experiments are hereafter referred as In/Ga-HA, In/Ga-FA, In/Ga-HA+FA
117
experiments for the In/Ga experiments with Aldrich humic acid, Suwannee River fulvic acid and
118
Suwannee River natural organic matter, respectively. Polycarbonate columns (19 cm length, 3 cm
119
inner diameter) were filled with quartz sand that was previously washed with HCl 1% for 24 h
120
and several times with DDW before being dried at 105 °C. The columns were saturated with
121
DDW adjusted at pH 6 for 6 h followed by saturation with the background solution (artificial
122
rainwater at pH 6) for 17 h from bottom to top at a flow rate of 0.6 mL min-1. The porosity of the
123
sand was 30%. 6
124
The inlet solution, consisting of 10 L of bromide as a conservative tracer at 500 µg L-1,
125
In(III) or Ga(III) at 1 mg L-1 with a humic substance at 10 mg L-1 or 2.5 mg L-1 in ARW at pH 6,
126
was then injected into the column at a flow rate of 0.9 mL min-1 or 2.7 mL min-1 for
127
approximately 80 pore volumes (PV). The pore volume was determined as the mass difference
128
between the saturated and the dry columns. The pH was monitored continuously at the column
129
outlets, and constant at 6.3 ± 0.3 for all of the experiments. The background solution was then
130
flushed again in the column for approximately 10 PV. The experiments were run simultaneously
131
in duplicate using the same inlet solution reservoir.
132
Fractions were collected every 9 min (for the experiments with a flow rate of 0.9 mL min-1)
133
or every 3 min(for the experiments with a flow rate of 2.7 mL min-1) using an automatic fraction
134
collector (Gilson). The samples were weighed and acidified with nitric acid to reach a final
135
concentration of nitric acid in the samples of 2%. The samples were then analyzed using an
136
inductively-coupled plasma mass spectrometer (ICP-MS Agilent 7700 s) to measure bromide,
137
indium and gallium concentrations. To monitor the stability of ionization efficiency with time,
138
cobalt was used as an internal standard. From the ICP-MS analysis, breakthrough curves of
139
indium and gallium were determined. The breakthrough curves show the relative concentration of
140
metal C/C0 as a function of PV. Retardation factors, Rf – representing the delay in arrival of the
141
metal at the column outlet, as compared to the bromide tracer – were calculated for each
142
experiment as the ratio between the number of PV required for the metal to reach half of its final
143
outlet concentration and the number of PV required for the tracer to reach half of its final outlet
144
concentration.
7
145
2.3 Speciation calculations
146
Indium and gallium speciation in the inlet solutions of the column experiments was
147
calculated using Visual Minteq (Gustafsson, 2011). The stability constants, K, for the hydrolysis
148
of the metals from Wood and Samson (2006) are given in Table 1.
149
Table 1: Thermodynamic constants used in this work.
Species
log K Species
GaOH2+
-2.9
Ga(OH)2+ -7.3
InOH2+
log K -4.0
In(OH)2+ -7.8
Ga(OH)3 -11.9 In(OH)3 -12.4 Ga(OH)4− -15.7 In(OH)4− -22.1 Ga(OH)3s 4.99
In(OH)3s 5.09
150 151
There is no literature published to date regarding stability constants of indium with HA
152
and gallium with HA. Complexation constants are usually calculated using experiments with
153
relatively high concentrations of metals, and therefore determination of these constants for
154
indium and gallium is difficult due to the low solubility of these metals. However, in the
155
framework of the NICA Donnan model (Kinniburgh et al., 1999), Milne et al. (2003) calculated a
156
relationship between the first hydrolysis formation constants of metal ions and the fitted NICA
157
Donnan parameters for binding by humic acids:
158
1 = 0.26 · log KOH + 2.59 with R2 = 0.83 n1 · log
(1)
159
2 = 0.41 · log KOH + 4.98 with R2 = 0.71 n2 · log
(2)
160
i is with n1 = 0.14 - 0.055 · log KOH and n2 = 0.76 · n1, where ni is the non-ideality parameter,
161
the generic median affinity constant of the metal low-affinity type of sites (carboxylic sites S1) 8
162
and high-affinity type of sites (phenolic sites S2), and KOH is first hydrolysis formation constant.
163
Equations (1) and (2) were used to calculate the parameters for the binding of In(III) and Ga(III)
164
by humic and fulvic substances in the framework of the NICA Donnan model (Table 2).
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165 166
Table 2: Non-ideality parameters and generic median affinity constants for gallium and indium with humic and fulvic acids calculated using eq (1) and (2).
Parameters/Metal Ga n1 = 0.30
In 0.36
For humic acid
n2 = 1 = log
0.23 6.13
0.27 4.31
16.65
12.21
For fulvic acid
2 = log 1 = log
4.72
2.86
2 = log
26.13
18.60
167 168
The speciation of indium and gallium in the inlet solutions of the column experiments is
169
presented in Figure 1. The calculations show that indium and gallium exhibit very different
170
speciations in the presence of humic acids, fulvic acids or a mixture of humic and fulvic acids at
171
the same concentration. Therefore, the transport of indium and gallium is expected to be
172
dependent on the type of humic substance. Indium is found mostly as In(OH)3 aq in the presence
173
of AHA (90.1% for a humic acid concentration of 2.5 mg L-1) and 7.9% of In-HA complexes. In
174
the In-FA experiments, the In-FA complexes represent 25% of the indium speciation. In presence
175
of SRNOM, In is present as a mixture of 81.8% In(OH)3aq and 16.3% In-NOM (consisting of
176
3.8% In-HA and 12.5% In-FA). For gallium, the main species are 95% Ga(OH)4- and 5% Ga-HA
177
in the Ga-HA experiments, 88.7% Ga(OH)4- and 11.3% Ga-FA in the Ga-FA experiments, and
178
91.8% Ga(OH)4- and 8.2% Ga-NOM in the Ga-HA+FA experiments. No precipitates of In(OH)3 s
179
and Ga(OH)3 s were observed in the timeframe of the experiments. Indium and gallium exhibit
180
different calculated speciations and therefore their transport behavior is expected to be different.
181
Gallium is expected to be present mostly as negatively charged ions Ga(OH)4- and the sand
182
surface is also slightly negatively charged at pH 6.3. Therefore electrostatic repulsion should lead
183
to faster elution for Ga than for In, which is present mostly as In(OH)3aq.
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184 185 A 100%
7.9 2.0
90%
12.5 25.0
29.4
3.8 1.8
Indium speciation
80% 1.6
70%
1.5
60% 50% 90.1
40%
81.8
73.4
69.1
30% 20% 10% 0% In HA 10 mg In HA 2.5 mg In FA + FA In HA In HA In2.5 FA mg In HA In HA+FA L-1mg L-1 2.52.5 mgmg L-1L-1 10L-1 mg L-1 2.5L-1 mg L-1 2.5 In(OH)3aq
In(OH)3 (aq)
186 B 100% 90%
In(OH)2+
In(OH)2+
5.0 19.4
In HA
In FA
In HA
In FA S1
11.3
5.7 2.5
88.7
91.8
Gallium speciation
80% 70% 60% 50% 40%
95.0 80.6
30% 20% 10% 0% Ga HA Ga2.5 HAppm Ga Ga Ga HA 10 mg Ga HA FA FA 2.5 mg 10L-1 mg L-1 2.5 mg L-1 2.5 mg L-1 L-1
187 188 189 190 191
Ga(OH)4- (aq) -
Ga(OH)4
Ga HA
Ga HA
GaGa HAHA+FA + FA 2.52.5 mgmg L-1L-1
Ga FA
Ga FA S1
Figure 1: Speciation of indium (A) and gallium (B) in the inlet solutions for solution containing humic acid, or fulvic acid or natural organic matter. The calculations were done using Visual Minteq for solutions of indium/gallium at 1 mg L-1 with humic substances at 10 mg L-1 or 2.5 mg L-1, at pH 6.3 in the artificial rainwater at an ionic strength of 6.5 mM. For the HA + FA experiment, it was considered that
11
192 193
50% of the natural organic matter is humic substances and 50% is fulvic substances. Species that are less than 0.5% are not represented on the graphs.
194
3
195
3.1 Indium
Results and discussion
196
The breakthrough curves (BTC) of indium, showing the relative concentration of indium as
197
a function of PV, are presented in Figure 2 for various conditions. Only one replicate is shown for
198
clarity (see Supplementary Materials for all replicates that are similar in terms of BTCs, C/C0max
199
and retardation factor Rf). A preliminary experiment at pH 3 – due to the metal solubility – was
200
performed only to indicate the time frame of the metal mobility without humic substances. The
201
BTC of In at pH 3 (Figure 2A) shows that indium is slowly transported as no indium was
202
detected in the outlet for the first 20 PV, and thereafter the BTC shows a classical sigmoid shaped
203
curve with an equilibrium reached after 60 PV at a C/C0 of 0.73. During the flushing phase with
204
the ARW background electrolyte solution, the concentration of indium increased again due to a
205
release of retained indium. The retardation factor of the In(III)-only experiments is 31.03, very
206
similar to the finding of Ringering et al. (2019) in experiments of In(III) with citrate at pH 6
207
(C/C0 = 0.8 and Rf = 31.2). However, no release of indium was observed in Ringering et al.
208
(2019), due to the formation of different species and complexes. In the current experiment, In at
209
pH 3 is present mostly as In3+ ions, while in Ringering et al. (2019), In is present mostly as
210
In(OH)3 aq and In-citrate. The trivalent indium ions have a weaker bond with sand than In-citrate
211
complexes that were broken to form indium precipitates, leading to stronger retention of indium
212
in the column.
213
In absence of humic substances, at pH 6.3, preliminary tests show that indium (and
214
gallium) is not mobile in the quartz sand, because it precipitates in solution. In the presence of 12
215
humic substances, indium was transported and its transport was shown to be faster (Figure 2B
216
and C) than for the metal alone at pH 3, or (compared to Ringering et al. (2019)) in the presence
217
of citrate at a similar pH of 6. Indium mobility is due to colloid facilitated transport, as expected
218
for metals in the presence of natural organic matter (Hou et al., 2005; Kretzschmar and Schäfer,
219
2005; Murata et al., 2018). However, one can notice than indium-only and indium-HA
220
experiments cannot be compared directly because they were not carried out at the same pH.
221
Indium (only) at pH 6 is insoluble and precipitates from solution.
13
A
1.2 1.0
C/C0
0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0
20
40
PV
60
80
100 B
1.2 1.0
C/C0
0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0
20
40
PV
60
80
100 C
1.2 1.0
C/C0
0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0
222 223 224 225 226
0
20
40
PV
60
80
100
Figure 2: Breakthrough curves of indium in sand column experiments A/ ● Indium 1 mg L-1 only at pH 3, flow rate 0.9 mL min-1, B/ ■ Indium 1 mg L-1, AHA 10 mg L-1 at pH 6.3, flow rate 0.9 mL min-1, C/ ■ Indium 1 mg L-1, AHA 10 mg L-1 at pH 6.3, flow rate 2.3 mL min-1. Dashed vertical lines represent the beginning of the flushing phase.
14
227 228 229
Table 3: Retardation factors Rf and maximum ratios of inlet concentration to measured outlet concentration of indium C/C0 of indium experiments.
Flow rate 0.9 mL/min Flow rate 2.3 mL/min
230
3.1.1
In-only In-AHA 10 mg L-1 In-AHA 10 mg L-1 In-AHA 2.5 mg L-1 In-SRFA 2.5 mg L-1 In-SRNOM 2.5 mg L-1
Retardation factor Rf 31.03 7.17 3.92 28.41 11.66 2.76
C/C0 0.73 0.54 0.44 1.06 0.98 0.83
Influence of humic acid on indium transport
231
Indium in presence of AHA at 10 mg L-1, flow rate of 0.9 mL min-1, displays faster
232
transport than for indium only, as seen in the BTCs (Figure 2B). For the first 5 PV, no indium
233
was detected at the column outlet, followed by a breakthrough of indium reaching a plateau after
234
37 PV. The retardation factor Rf = 7.17 and the C/C0 maximum is 0.54 (
235
Table 3). Indium retention in the column is explained by the (calculated) speciation in
236
solution. Indium, in the inlet solution, 69% is present as In(OH)3
237
complexes (Figure 1). It is hypothesized that indium as In-AHA complexes is transported mostly
238
through the column, while In(OH)3 aq interacts strongly with the sand surface. This assumption is
239
supported by the fact that no indium was released during the flushing phase, indicating that the
240
retained indium was bound strongly on the quartz surface.
aq
and 29% as In-AHA
241
Ringering et al. (2019) reported a similar experiment (same indium and AHA
242
concentrations, similar flow rate of 1 mL min-1, pH 6) with citrate in the inlet solutions. A plateau
243
was reached on the BTC after 75 PV (37 PV in the current experiment) with C/C0 = 0.9 and Rf =
244
18.7. The transport of indium was therefore much faster in the current experiment, although
245
indium displayed greater retention relative to the Ringering et al. (2019) experiment. Citrate is
15
246
thus seen to stabilize indium in solution better than Aldrich humic acid (at pH 6), and is also
247
likely to be the key control (rather than the presence of humic colloids) on indium mobility
248
examined in previous studies (Hou et al., 2005; Murata et al., 2018).
249
3.1.2
Influence of flow rate
250
The influence of flow rate on the mobility of indium is shown in Figure 2B, 2C). If the
251
adsorption of the metal on the quartz surface is sufficiently fast, no difference will be observed in
252
the BTCs. However, the presence of organic matter leads to more complex system because
253
dissociation of the metal-humic substances complexes can occur slowly, and therefore affect the
254
transport behavior. When the flow rate is tripled (0.9 mL min-1 to 2.3 mL min-1), the transport of
255
indium is faster (Rf = 3.92 at 2.3 mL min-1 vs. 7.17 at 0.9 mL min-1) as expected. The BTCs have
256
a similar shape, and a similar C/C0 (
257
Table 3). However, tailing was observed during the flushing phase at the higher flow rate.
258
This tailing is due to a release of weakly bound indium during the flushing phase. Because these
259
two experiments were conducted under the same conditions, except for the flow rate, it can be
260
assumed that the kinetics of In(III) sorption onto sand plays a role in the release of indium during
261
the flushing phase. Indium transport depends on kinetically controlled interaction of In(III) and
262
In(III)-AHA with the sand surface. When the flow rate is increased, there is less contact time
263
between the metal and the quartz surface and therefore less sorption. Humic substances can bind
264
metal ions in two different modes: (i) exchangeable fraction where the metal ion is initially bound
265
strongly to the humic substance, but may be removed rapidly if the complex is in the presence of
266
a stronger ligand or a mineral surface that can bind the metal, and (ii) a non-exchangeable
267
fraction with some part of the metal can slowly transfer to the non-exchangeable fraction with a
268
very slow dissociation. Metal ions can return from the non-exchangeable fraction to the 16
269
exchangeable fraction via a process that can have a slow kinetics. If In(III) sorption onto sand is
270
kinetically slow, no equilibrium can be reached in the timeframe of the higher flow rate
271
experiments, leading to release of indium during the flushing phase. Other trivalent ions were
272
shown to have a kinetically dependent transport in presence of natural organic matter (Clark and
273
Choppin, 1996; Schuessler et al., 2000).
274
3.1.3
Influence of humic acid concentration
275
The influence of humic acid concentration on indium transport was also investigated
276
(Figure 3A). In the experiment shown in Figure 3A, the concentration of indium was kept
277
constant while the concentrations of AHA were 2.5 and 10 mg L-1. In the inlet solution, In(III) is
278
composed of 69% In(OH)3 aq and 29.4% In-AHA in the AHA 10 mg L-1 experiment, vs. 90.1%
279
In(OH)3 aq and 7.9% In-AHA in the AHA 2.5 mg L-1 experiment.
280
The BTCs show two very different behaviors of indium in the columns after 30 PV. When
281
AHA concentration was 10 mg L-1, a plateau was reached on the BTC after 30 PV, while in the
282
experiment where AHA concentration was 2.5 mg L-1, the BTC displays a first plateau at 30 PV,
283
followed by a progressive increase in indium relative concentration, until reaching second
284
plateau at C/C0 = 1. A possible explanation for this behavior might be that at the higher AHA
285
concentration, In(III)-AHA complexes can precipitate on the sand surface due to the pH (6.3). In
286
contrast, for the AHA 2.5 mg L-1 experiment, there is a progressive saturation of the sand surface
287
sites by In(OH)3 aq that represents 90% of indium in the inlet solution. In(III) inorganic species
288
can precipitate on the sand surface and when the sites are saturated, the indium in solution can no
289
longer interact with the sand and is transported to the column outlet. It can be noted that
290
experiments to examine possible precipitation of complexes on sand surfaces would be of limited
291
value, because the low metal concentrations used in the experiments would yield amounts of 17
292
metal precipitate too low to identify by imaging techniques. Using higher concentrations would
293
likely lead to precipitation on sand but might not be relevant to behavior under natural conditions
294
at lower environmental concentrations.
295
18
A
1.2 1
C/C0
0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0
20
40
PV
60
80
100 B
1.2 1.0
C/C0
0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0
20
40
PV
60
80
100 C
1.2 1.0
C/C0
0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0
296 297 298 299 300
0
20
40
PV
60
80
100
Figure 3: Breakthrough curves of indium in sand column experiments at a flow rate of 2.3 mL min-1 (A) ■ Indium 1 mg L-1, AHA 10 mg L-1 at pH 6.3, ■ Indium 1 mg L-1, AHA 2.5 mg L-1 at pH 6.3, (B) ♦ Indium 1 mg L-1, SRFA 2.5 mg L-1 at pH 6.3, (C) ▲Indium 1 mg L-1, SRNOM 2.5 mg L-1 at pH 6.3. Dashed vertical lines represent the beginning of the flushing phase.
301
19
302
A modeling analysis was performed on the measurements shown in Figures 3B and 3C,
303
using the Hydrus-1D software package (Šimůnek et al., 2016), to gain additional insight on the
304
mechanisms of transport and retention. Briefly, a two-site, kinetic attachment/detachment model
305
was found to match both experiments, indicating that the principal mechanisms of retention are
306
time-dependent attachment for the first site, with no detachment, and instantaneous attachment
307
and detachment for the second site. It is noted that for indium, a clear difference was found
308
between the BTCs of the In-SRNOM and In-SRFA complexes, as shown in Figures 3B and 3C,
309
and described above. The In-SRNOM is more mobile (i.e., has lower retardation factor than the
310
complex with SRFA) and a plateau is reached at C/C0 = 0.8, compared to C/C0 = 1.0 for the
311
SRFA. The model shows higher attachment rate constants (ka1 and ka2) for the In-SRNOM
312
complex, a lower detachment rate constant (kd2), and lower sorption capacity (Smax1). These
313
parameters are in accord with the discussion above linking the plateau to the sorption capacity
314
(Smax1) (SRNOM
315
the fitting parameters (Table S3, and Figures S5 and S6) are given in the Supplementary Material.
316 317
3.1.4
Influence of SRFA and SRNOM
318
The influence of two other natural organic matter extracts on the transport of indium was
319
investigated (Figure 3B, 3C). In the presence of SRFA, indium elutes faster than in the presence
320
of SRNOM, most likely due to the higher proportion of In-humic substance colloids present in
321
solution. Indeed, for the same concentration of humic substances, indium is predicted to be
322
present more in the form of In(III)-humic colloids in the SRFA experiment (25% of In-SRFA)
323
than in the SRNOM (16.4% of In-SRNOM) and in the AHA (7.9% of In-AHA) experiments
324
(Figure 1). Indium transport is faster in the SRNOM experiments than in the AHA experiments 20
325
(Rf = 2.76 in the SRNOM experiment vs. 28.41 in the AHA experiment), as more In-SRNOM
326
complexes are expected than In-AHA complexes. The type of humic substances most likely plays
327
a role in the transport of indium.
328
3.2 Gallium
329
Compared to indium, gallium transport in quartz sand is slow, as seen in the breakthrough
330
curves shown in Figure 4. In the experiment with gallium (alone) at pH 3, no gallium was
331
detected in the first 60 PV following by breakthrough with a C/C0 of 0.50. One can notice that no
332
plateau was reached in the timeframe of the experiment. The slower transport of gallium
333
compared to indium is in accordance with a study of In(III) and Ga(III) adsorption onto SiO2
334
surfaces (Bi and Westerhoff, 2016). This is due to the smaller ionic radius and stronger ionic
335
potential of gallium compared to indium (Shannon, 1976). However, Ringering et al. (2019)
336
showed that the transport of gallium was faster than indium in the presence of citrate. Citrate
337
alters the mobility of indium and gallium by forming stronger complexes with gallium than with
338
indium (Ivanova et al., 2015), leading to alteration of transport dynamics.
21
A
1.2 1.0
C/C0
0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0
20
40
PV
60
80
100 B
1.2 1.0
C/C0
0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0
30
60
90
PV
120 C
1.2 1.0
C/C0
0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0
339 340 341 342 343
0
20
40
PV
60
80
100
Figure 4: Breakthrough curves of gallium in sand column experiments (A) ● Gallium 1 mg L-1 only at pH 1 3, flow rate 0.9 mL min- , (B) ■ Gallium 1 mg L-1, AHA 10 mg L-1 at pH 6.3, flow rate 0.9 mL min-1, (C) ■ Gallium 1 mg L-1, AHA 10 mg L-1 at pH 6.3, flow rate 2.3 mL min-1. Dashed vertical lines represent the beginning of the flushing phase.
344
22
345
3.2.1
Influence of humic acid on gallium transport
346
In the presence of AHA (Figure 4B), gallium mobility is enhanced due to the complexation
347
with humic acid in solution. The BTC displays a slow breakthrough in the first 60 PV, following
348
by a faster one, reaching C/C0 = 1.03 at 105 PV. The retardation factor Rf = 57.09 (Table 4)
349
compared to Rf = 7.17 for indium in the same experimental conditions (Table 3), showing again a
350
faster transport of indium compared to gallium. However, the retention of indium was stronger in
351
the column with C/C0 = 0.54 (Table 3). During the flushing phase, tailing is observed due to a
352
slow release of gallium that was not bound strongly to the sand surface. As for indium,
353
precipitation of the hydroxy species of gallium on the sand surface with hydrogen bonds on the
354
surface might be predominant. Gallium is expected to be present mostly as negatively charged
355
ions Ga(OH)4-, and the sand surface is also slightly negatively charged at pH 6.3. Therefore,
356
electrostatic repulsion should lead to faster elution for Ga than for In, mostly present as
357
In(OH)3(aq). However, transport of indium is faster than that of gallium. Therefore, it can be
358
assumed that electrostatic interactions are not the predominant retention mechanisms, and it can
359
be hypothesized that the complexation of indium and gallium with humic substances is most
360
likely underestimated. Higher proportions of the metals are most likely bound to the humic
361
substances, hence changing the speciation of the metals and affecting their transport. Gallium
362
elution from the column was complete, even though only 19.4% of gallium is expected to be
363
bound to the humic acid based on the speciation calculations (Figure 1B), compared to the indium
364
experiment where 29.4% of indium is In-HA (Figure 1A). This is likely due to the inorganic
365
species of the metal present in solution. In the indium experiments, In(III) is present mostly as
366
In(OH)3
367
bonds or by precipitating on the surface sites as In(OH)3 s. Gallium is present mostly as Ga(OH)4-,
aq
and it is therefore expected to interact with the sand surface by forming hydrogen
23
368
so that one can assume that interactions of Ga(OH)4- with the deprotonated and negatively
369
charged SiO2 sites of the quartz sand are not favored.
370
3.2.2
Influence of flow rate
371
As observed for indium, the flow rate influences the retention of gallium in quartz sand.
372
When the flow rate is increased by a factor of 3 (Figure 5B, 5C), gallium transport is faster with a
373
retardation factor of 35.23 in the experiment at 2.3 mL/min compared to 57.09 in the experiment
374
at 0.9 mL/min (Table 4).
375 376
Table 4: Retardation factors Rf and maximum ratios of inlet concentration to measured outlet concentration of indium C/C0 of gallium experiments.
Flow rate 0.9 mL min-1 Flow rate 2.3 mL min-1
377
3.2.3
Ga only Ga AHA 10 mg L-1 Ga AHA 10 mg L-1 Ga AHA 2.5 mg L-1 Ga SRFA 2.5 mg L-1 Ga SRNOM 2.5 mg L-1
Retardation factor Rf 148.27 57.09 35.23 32.29 24.52 44.33
C/C0 0.50 1.03 0.62 0.45 0.78 0.58
Influence of humic acid concentration
378
The mobility of gallium is affected also by the concentration of humic acid. In the
379
experiment with Ga 1 mg L-1, AHA 10 mg L-1 (Figure 5A), 19.4% of the gallium is expected to
380
be bound to the humic acid, vs. only 5% in the Ga 1 mg L-1, AHA 2.5 mg L-1 experiment (Figure
381
5A) in the speciation calculations. Stronger retention of gallium is observed in the experiment
382
with the lower HA concentration, with no breakthrough of gallium in the first 20 PV, and very
383
slow evolution of the breakthrough curve. During the flushing phase, gallium is released from the
384
column as the concentration of gallium continues to increase. This indicates a detachment of
385
weakly attached gallium from the sand, as suggested above due to the negatively charged sites of
24
386
the sand. In the indium experiment, In(III)-HA complexes likely precipitated on the sand surface
387
for the higher AHA concentration. This behavior was not observed for gallium. A
1.2 1
C/C0
0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0
20
40
PV
60
80
100 B
1.2 1.0
C/C0
0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0
20
40
PV
60
80
100 C
1.2 1.0
C/C0
0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0
388 389 390 391 392
0
20
40
PV
60
80
100
Figure 5: Breakthrough curves of gallium in sand column experiments at a flow rate of 2.3 mL min-1. (A) ■ Gallium 1 mg L-1, AHA 10 mg L-1 at pH 6.3, ■ Gallium 1 mg L-1, AHA 2.5 mg L-1 at pH 6.3, (B) ♦ Gallium 1 mg L-1, SRFA 2.5 mg L-1 at pH 6.3, (C) ▲Gallium 1 mg L-1, SRNOM 2.5 mg L-1 at pH 6.3. Dashed vertical lines represent the beginning of the flushing phase.
25
393
Similar to the modeling analysis of indium following Figure 5, a two-site, kinetic
394
attachment/detachment model was found also to match the gallium measurements shown in
395
Figures 5B and 5C. Thus, for gallium as well as for indium, the principal mechanisms of
396
retention are kinetic attachment for the first site and instantaneous attachment and detachment for
397
the second site. The fitted attachment rate constants are larger for gallium than for indium,
398
accounting for the higher retention of gallium complexes in the column. It is noted that the BTCs
399
of the two Ga complexes show similar patterns, and therefore the same sorption capacity (Smax1)
400
was used for both complexes. Slightly higher attachment rate constants (combining ka1 and ka2)
401
for the Ga-SRNOM are found, which correspond to the somewhat higher retardation factor
402
discussed above. Full details of the model and the fitting parameters (Table S3 and Figures S7
403
and S8) are given in the Supplementary Material.
404 405
3.2.4
Influence of SRFA and SRNOM
406
In the presence of fulvic acid (Figure 5B), the mobility of gallium is favored compared to
407
the experiment with AHA (Figure 5A) with Rf = 24.52 and C/C0 = 0.78 in the SRFA experiment
408
vs. Rf = 32.29 and C/C0 = 0.45 in the AHA experiment (Table 4). Gallium is retained more
409
strongly than indium in the presence of SRNOM (higher C/C0), but the retention of both metals is
410
similar in the presence of SRFA and AHA. However, indium is eluted faster than gallium.
411
Gallium is also more mobile in the presence of SRFA than in the presence of SRNOM (Rf =
412
44.33 and C/C0 = 0.58 for SRNOM experiment), as also observed for indium. This is likely due
413
to the speciation of gallium in the inlet solution, where gallium was predicted to be more present
414
as Ga(III)-humic substances complexes in the SRFA experiment (11.3% Ga-SRFA species vs.
415
8.2% Ga-SRNOM) in the speciation calculations. 26
416
The type of humic substance plays a role in the different retention behaviors of indium
417
and gallium in quartz sand. Weng et al. (2002a) studied the transport of aluminum in the presence
418
of humic substances. Aluminum lies on the same column as indium and gallium in the periodic
419
table and is therefore expected to have a similar transport behavior. The BTCs of aluminum in the
420
presence of humic and fulvic acids, reported by Weng et al. (2002a), showed that Al was retained
421
more in the presence of humic acids than with fulvic acids, as found also here for indium and
422
gallium. Fulvic acids were shown to be smaller than humic acids (Moon et al., 2006; d’Orlyé and
423
Reiller, 2012) and have a higher negative charge. van der Waals attraction forces of fulvic acids
424
are lower than those of humic acids due to their smaller molecular weight and therefore do not
425
aggregate easily and facilitate the transport of the trivalent metals. Moreover, studies on the
426
structure of humic substances show that SRFA has a lower aromatic/aliphatic ratio compared to
427
SRNOM – 0.727 for SRFA vs. 0.852 for SRNOM (Erhayem and Sohn, 2014). A higher
428
aromatic/aliphatic ratio leads to a higher adsorption of humic substances onto surfaces,
429
explaining the higher retention of indium and gallium in SRNOM experiments compared to
430
SRFA.
431
432
4
Conclusion
433
Indium and gallium were shown to be more mobile in the presence of SRFA with indium
434
having a higher mobility than gallium. The speciation calculations were helpful to understand the
435
proportions of indium and gallium bound to the humic substances (up to 26%) that can be more
436
mobile than inorganic complexes. The increase in flow rate evidenced the importance of kinetic
437
interactions of the metals with the sand. When the flow rate increased, the transport of indium 27
438
and gallium was faster due to less contact time between the metal and the quartz sand, leading to
439
less sorption in the columns. Fulvic acids and natural organic matter composed of humic and
440
fulvic acids were shown to increase the mobility of indium and gallium compared to humic acids.
441
Indium mobility decreased according to SRNOM > SRFA > AHA, while gallium mobility
442
decreased as SRFA > SRNOM > AHA. Due to their lower aromatic/aliphatic ratio, fulvic acids
443
are less sorbed onto mineral surfaces than humic acids. Further studies are however needed to
444
investigate the mechanisms impacting the transport of trivalent metals due to the presence of
445
different humic substance colloids.
446
Acknowledgements
447
This research was supported by the Israel Water Authority (Grant No. 45015199895) and the De
448
Botton Center for Marine Science. B.B. holds the Sam Zuckerberg Professorial Chair in
449
Hydrology.
450
Conflicts of interest
451
The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
452
5
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Highlights Indium is more mobile than gallium in the presence of humic substances SRFA enhances the mobility of the metals more than AHA and SRNOM Higher than expected proportions of the metals are bound to the humic substances
The authors declare no conflict of interest
Declaration of interests ☒ The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper. ☐The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: