Structure and Charge Hopping Dynamics in Green Rust

Green rust is a family of mixed-valent iron phases formed by a number of abiotic and biotic processes under alkaline suboxic conditions. Because of its high Fe2+ content, green rust is a potentially important phase for pollution remediation by serving as a powerful electron donor for reductive trans...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of physical chemistry. C Vol. 111; no. 30; pp. 11414 - 11423
Main Authors Wander, Matthew C. F., Rosso, Kevin M., Schoonen, Martin A. A.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 02.08.2007
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Summary:Green rust is a family of mixed-valent iron phases formed by a number of abiotic and biotic processes under alkaline suboxic conditions. Because of its high Fe2+ content, green rust is a potentially important phase for pollution remediation by serving as a powerful electron donor for reductive transformation. However, mechanisms of oxidation of this material are poorly understood. An essential component of the green rust structure is a mixed-valent brucite-like Fe(OH)2 sheet comprised of a two-dimensional network of edge-sharing iron octahedra. Liquid nitrogen temperature Mössbauer spectra show that any Fe2+−Fe3+ valence interchange reaction must be slower than approximately 107 s-1. Using Fe(OH)2 as structural analogue for reduced green rust, we performed Hartree−Fock calculations on periodic slab models and cluster representations to determine the structure and hopping mobility of Fe3+ hole polarons in this material, providing a first principles assessment of the Fe2+−Fe3+ valence interchange reaction rate. The calculations show that, among three possible symmetry unique iron-to-iron hops within a sheet, a hop to next-nearest neighbors at an intermediate distance of 5.6 Å is the fastest. The predicted rate is on the order of 1010 s-1 (at 300 K) and 103 s-1 (at 70 K), consistent the Mössbauer-based constraint. All other possibilities, including hopping across interlayer spaces, are predicted to be slower than 107 s-1. Collectively, the findings suggest the possibility of hole self-diffusion along sheets as a mechanism for regeneration of lattice Fe2+ sites, consistent with previous experimental observations of edge-inward progressive oxidation of green rust.
Bibliography:istex:B71239B4C9FB405573F32EA37CA15D778CEFE6AE
ark:/67375/TPS-31F8F8SG-2
USDOE
AC05-76RL01830
PNNL-SA-55273
ISSN:1932-7447
1932-7455
DOI:10.1021/jp072762n