Âé¶¹´«Ã½AV

Article

Interplay of Fe and S biogeochemistry shapes in situ iron mineral transformations in contrasting intertidal sediments

Details

Citation

Kubeneck LJ, Fantappi¨¨ G, Notini L, Rothwell KA, ThomasArrigo LK & Kretzschmar R (2025) Interplay of Fe and S biogeochemistry shapes in situ iron mineral transformations in contrasting intertidal sediments. Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts. https://doi.org/10.1039/d5em00213c

Abstract
The transformation and stability of iron (Fe) minerals in coastal sediments are closely linked to the sulfur (S) cycle, influencing the fate of nutrients, carbon, and contaminants. However, in situ studies of these interactions in coastal sediments remain limited. We investigated the transformation of lepidocrocite, goethite, and mackinawite in three intertidal field plots with contrasting Fe and S biogeochemistry. Fe minerals were enriched with 57Fe and mixed with the sediment, allowing close contact with the other inorganic and organic components of the sediment. After 8 weeks, transformation products were assessed using 57Fe M?ssbauer spectroscopy. Regular porewater analysis complemented solid-phase analyses, supporting the understanding of transformation pathways and extents. Under low-sulfide, Fe-reducing conditions, lepidocrocite did not transform to more crystalline Fe-oxides such as goethite or magnetite. Instead, ¡«20% of the lepidocrocite transformed, mostly into a disordered Fe-phase, due to reductive dissolution and a small extent of sulfidation. Goethite, in contrast, remained apparently unchanged under the same conditions. These results indicate that both Fe-oxides may persist during extended anoxic periods under Fe-reducing conditions in coastal sediments and thus may influence elemental cycles. However, in sulfidic environments, lepidocrocite and goethite transformed into amorphous, nonstoichiometric Fe¨Csulfide and greigite. We hypothesize that amorphous Fe¨Csulfide precipitated first, later transforming into greigite; a potential precursor of pyrite formation. This is further supported by the transformation of synthetic mackinawite into greigite under high sulfide conditions, suggesting a sulfidation pathway that may eventually lead to pyrite formation in coastal sediments.

Journal
Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts

StatusEarly Online
Publication date online30/11/2025
Date accepted by journal07/10/2025
URL
PublisherRoyal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
ISSN2050-7887
eISSN2050-7895

People (1)

Dr Katherine Rothwell

Dr Katherine Rothwell

Lecturer in Earth & Env. Chemistry, Biological and Environmental Sciences

Files (1)