posted on 2015-03-17, 00:00authored byFubo Luan, Christopher
A. Gorski, William D. Burgos
Nitroaromatic
compounds (NACs) are ubiquitous environmental contaminants
that are susceptible to biological and abiotic reduction. Prior works
have found that for the abiotic reduction of NACs, the logarithm of
the NACs’ rate constants correlate with one-electron reduction
potential values of the NACs (EH,NAC1) according to linear free
energy relationships (LFERs). Here, we extend the application of LFERs
to the bioreduction of NACs and to the abiotic reduction of NACs by
bioreduced (and pasteurized) iron-bearing clay minerals. A linear
correlation (R2 = 0.96) was found between
the NACs’ bioreduction rate constants (kobs) and EH,NAC1 values. The LFER slope of log kobs versus EH,NAC1/(2.303RT/F) was close to one (0.97), which implied that
the first electron transfer to the NAC was the rate-limiting step
of bioreduction. LFERs were also established between NAC abiotic reduction
rate constants by bioreduced iron-bearing clay minerals (montmorillonite
SWy-2 and nontronite NAu-2). The second-order NAC reduction rate constants
(k) by bioreduced SWy-2 and NAu-2 were well correlated
to EH,NAC1 (R2 = 0.97 for
both minerals), consistent with bioreduction results. However, the
LFER slopes of log k versus EH,NAC1/(2.303RT/F) were significantly less than one
(0.48–0.50) for both minerals, indicating that the first electron
transfer to the NAC was not the rate-limiting step of abiotic reduction.
Finally, we demonstrate that the rate of 4-acetylnitrobenzene reduction
by bioreduced SWy-2 and NAu-2 correlated to the reduction potential
of the clay (EH,clay, R2 = 0.95 for both minerals), indicating that the clay
reduction potential also influences its reactivity.