Mechanisms Governing the Stability of Fe-As Complexes: Roles of Environmental and Material Intrinsic Factors

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Abstract

Arsenic (As) contamination threatens ecosystems and human health, and iron (hydr)oxides-mediated formation of Fe-As composites is a key strategy for arsenic immobilization, while the long-term stability of these composites under complex environmental conditions remains a critical concern. This study systematically investigated the interactive effects of environmental factors (temperature: 5-35°C, pH: 4-8, competing ions: phosphate and citrate) and material intrinsic properties (ferrihydrite aging: 0-60 days, Fe/As molar ratio: 1.875 and 5.66, adsorption time) on Fe-As composite stability using multiscale characterization techniques and theoretical modeling. Results showed that temperature was the dominant controlling factor, with arsenic release increasing by 4.25% per 1°C rise (178% higher at 35°C vs. 20°C) and an exponential relationship model established (R²=0.96). Ferrihydrite aging enhanced stability, as 60-day aged composites (Fh60d-As) exhibited minimal arsenic release (18.83%) at pH 4/20°C, attributed to increase As(V)-O-Fe binding energy (1.2 eV) and -OH group enhancement (12.5%). Phosphate induced 2.4-fold higher arsenic release than citrate, and lower pH (4-6) reduced release via enhanced protonation. A stability prediction model was developed (R²=0.91), and practical remediation strategies were proposed: maintaining temperatures below 25°C in arsenic-containing waste repositories and using pre-aged iron-based materials. This work provides quantitative benchmarks and mechanistic insights for contaminated site rehabilitation.

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