Effects of Iron on Arsenic Speciation and Redox Chemistry in Acid Mine Water

  • Bednar A.J. (Department of Chemistry and Geochemistry, Colorado School of Mines, National Water Quality Laboratory, U.S. Geological Survey) ;
  • Garbarino J.R. (National Water Quality Laboratory, U.S. Geological Survey) ;
  • Ranville J.F. (Department of Chemistry and Geochemistry, Colorado School of Mines) ;
  • Wildeman T.R. (Department of Chemistry and Geochemistry, Colorado School of Mines)
  • Published : 2004.12.01

Abstract

Concern about arsenic is increasing throughout the world, including areas of the United States. Elevated levels of arsenic above current drinking-water regulations in ground and surface water can be the result of purely natural phenomena, but often are due to anthropogenic activities, such as mining and agriculture. The current study correlates arsenic speciation in acid mine drainage and mining influenced water with the important water-chemistry properties Eh, pH, and iron(III) concentration. The results show that arsenic speciation is generally in equilibrium with iron chemistry in low pH AMD, which is often not the case in other natural-water matrices. High pH mine waters and groundwater do not 짐ways hold to the redox predictions as well as low pH AMD samples. The oxidation and precipitation of oxyhydroxides depletes iron from some systems, and this also affects arsenite and arsenate concentrations differently through sorption processes.

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