TY - JOUR
T1 - Molybdenum Burial Mechanism in Sulfidic Sediments: Iron-Sulfide Pathway
T2 - Iron-Sulfide Pathway
AU - Vorlicek, Trent P
AU - Chappaz, Anthony
AU - Helz, George R.
AU - Vue, Pakou
AU - Vezina, Austin
AU - Hunter, Wayland
N1 - Funding Information:
TPV and AC thank the U.S. National Science Foundation (Awards EAR-1503567 and EAR-1503596) for funding this research. T.P.V. and A.C. acknowledge the Donors of the American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund (PRF 52201-UR2 and ACS-PRF 54583-DNI2) for supporting this research. This research used resources of the Advanced Photon Source, a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facility operated for the DOE Office of Science by Argonne National Laboratory under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357. We acknowledge the support of GeoSoilEnviroCARHS (Sector 13), which is supported by the National Science Foundation - Earth Sciences (EAR-1128799), and the Department of Energy, Geosciences (DE-FG02-94ER14466).
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2018 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2018/6/21
Y1 - 2018/6/21
N2 - Relative to continental crust, sediments underlying sulfidic marine waters are molybdenum-rich, a property preserved in the rock record and useful for characterizing paleoenvironments. The enrichment mechanism is not agreed upon but is attributed at least partly to deposition of Fe-Mo-S compounds, which are as yet uncharacterized. Here, we determine the composition and stability of colloidal Fe-Mo-S precipitates formed at mildly basic pH and H2S(aq) > 10-5 M. The first product consists simply of FeMoS4, with Ksp = 10-14.95. Within hours, FeMoS4 irreversibly transforms by internal self-reduction to a Mo(IV) product of similar composition. The reduced product is insoluble in 1 M HCl but soluble in concentrated HNO3, implying that it would be recovered with pyrite in a common assay of sediments. X-ray absorption fine structure data show that Mo(IV) in the colloids is coordinated by a split first shell of about five sulfur atoms at average distances of 2.31 and 2.46 Å and in its second shell by an iron atom at about 2.80 Å. These properties resemble those determined for Mo in modern anoxic lake sediments and in Phanerozoic black shales. The atomic environment around Mo suggests that the colloidal products may be inorganic polymers containing cuboid, Fe2Mo2S4 4+ cores. Such materials are so far unreported by mineralogists, although a rare mineral, jordisite, may be a related, but more Mo-rich material. The low solubility of FeMoS4 makes it a feasible precipitate in euxinic waters like those in the modern Black Sea. We propose that colloids similar to those studied here could account for Mo-enrichment in euxinic basin sediments and black shales.
AB - Relative to continental crust, sediments underlying sulfidic marine waters are molybdenum-rich, a property preserved in the rock record and useful for characterizing paleoenvironments. The enrichment mechanism is not agreed upon but is attributed at least partly to deposition of Fe-Mo-S compounds, which are as yet uncharacterized. Here, we determine the composition and stability of colloidal Fe-Mo-S precipitates formed at mildly basic pH and H2S(aq) > 10-5 M. The first product consists simply of FeMoS4, with Ksp = 10-14.95. Within hours, FeMoS4 irreversibly transforms by internal self-reduction to a Mo(IV) product of similar composition. The reduced product is insoluble in 1 M HCl but soluble in concentrated HNO3, implying that it would be recovered with pyrite in a common assay of sediments. X-ray absorption fine structure data show that Mo(IV) in the colloids is coordinated by a split first shell of about five sulfur atoms at average distances of 2.31 and 2.46 Å and in its second shell by an iron atom at about 2.80 Å. These properties resemble those determined for Mo in modern anoxic lake sediments and in Phanerozoic black shales. The atomic environment around Mo suggests that the colloidal products may be inorganic polymers containing cuboid, Fe2Mo2S4 4+ cores. Such materials are so far unreported by mineralogists, although a rare mineral, jordisite, may be a related, but more Mo-rich material. The low solubility of FeMoS4 makes it a feasible precipitate in euxinic waters like those in the modern Black Sea. We propose that colloids similar to those studied here could account for Mo-enrichment in euxinic basin sediments and black shales.
KW - Molybdenum
KW - colloids
KW - euxinic basins
KW - iron sulfide
KW - jordisite
UR - https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsearthspacechem.8b00016
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85048975644&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acsearthspacechem.8b00016
DO - 10.1021/acsearthspacechem.8b00016
M3 - Article
SN - 2472-3452
VL - 2
SP - 565
EP - 576
JO - ACS Earth and Space Chemistry
JF - ACS Earth and Space Chemistry
IS - 6
ER -