Heterogeneous Sorption of Radionuclides Predicted by Crystal Surface Nanoroughness

Environ Sci Technol. 2021 Dec 7;55(23):15797-15809. doi: 10.1021/acs.est.1c04413. Epub 2021 Nov 23.

Abstract

Reactive transport modeling (RTM) is an essential tool for the prediction of contaminants' behavior in the bio- and geosphere. However, RTM of sorption reactions is constrained by the reactive surface site assessment. The reactive site density variability of the crystal surface nanotopography provides an "energetic landscape", responsible for heterogeneous sorption efficiency, not covered in current RTM approaches. Here, we study the spatially heterogeneous sorption behavior of Eu(III), as an analogue to trivalent actinides, on a polycrystalline nanotopographic calcite surface and quantify the sorption efficiency as a function of surface nanoroughness. Based on experimental data from micro-focus time-resolved laser-induced luminescence spectroscopy (μTRLFS), vertical scanning interferometry, and electron back-scattering diffraction (EBSD), we parameterize a surface complexation model (SCM) using surface nanotopography data. The validation of the quantitatively predicted spatial sorption heterogeneity suggests that retention reactions can be considerably influenced by nanotopographic surface features. Our study presents a way to implement heterogeneous surface reactivity into a SCM for enhanced prediction of radionuclide retention.

Keywords: crystal surface reactivity; radionuclide migration; sorption reactions; surface complexation modeling; μTRLFS.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Actinoid Series Elements*
  • Adsorption

Substances

  • Actinoid Series Elements