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Microbially Mediated Calcium Carbonate Precipitation: Implications for Interpreting Calcite Precipitation and for Solid-Phase Capture of Inorganic Contaminants
Authors:Lesley A Warren  Patricia A Maurice  Nagina Parmar  F Grant Ferris
Institution:1. Center for Ecogenomics , Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University , Tempe, Arizona, USA;2. Soil and Crop Sciences Department , Texas A&3. M University , College Station, Texas, USA;4. Environmental Sciences Department , Oak Ridge National Laboratory , Oak Ridge, Tennessee, USA;5. Institute for Environmental Genomics and Department of Botany and Microbiology , University of Oklahoma , Norman, Oklahoma, USA
Abstract:Microbial degradation of urea was investigated as a potential geochemical catalyst for Ca carbonate precipitation and associated solid phase capture of common groundwater contaminants (Sr, UO2, Cu) in laboratory batch experiments. Bacterial degradation of urea increased pH and promoted Ca carbonate precipitation in both bacterial control and contaminant treatments. Associated solid phase capture of Sr was highly effective, capturing 95% of the 1 mM Sr added within 24 h. The results for Sr are consistent with solid solution formation rather than discrete Sr carbonate phase precipitation. In contrast, UO2 capture was not as effective, reaching only 30% of the initial 1 mM UO2 added, and also reversible, dropping to 7% by 24 h. These results likely reflect differing sites of incorporation of these two elements-Ca lattice sites for Sr versus crystal defect sites for UO2. Cu sequestration was poor, resulting from toxicity of the metal to the bacteria, which arrested urea degradation and concomitant Ca carbonate precipitation. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) indicated a variety of morphologies reminiscent of those observed in the marine stromatolite literature. In bacterial control treatments, X-ray diffraction (XRD) analyses indicated only calcite; while in the presence of either Sr or UO2, both calcite and vaterite, a metastable polymorph of Ca carbonate, were identified. Tapping mode atomic force microscopy (AFM) indicated differences in surface microtopography among abiotic, bacterial control, and bacterial contaminant systems. These results indicate that Ca carbonate precipitation induced by passive biomineralization processes is highly effective and may provide a useful bioremediation strategy for Ca carbonate-rich aquifers where Sr contamination issues exist.
Keywords:Afm Authigenic Precipitation Bacteria Ca Carbonate Contaminants
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