Mobilization of arsenic in groundwater of Bangladesh: evidence from an incubation study |
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Authors: | H. M. Anawar J. Akai T. Yoshioka E. Konohira J. Y. Lee H. Fukuhara M. Tari Kul Alam A. Garcia-Sanchez |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Environmental Geochemistry, IRNASA-CSIC, Cordel De Merinas 40-52, Aptdo 257, Salamanca, 37008, Spain;(2) Department of Geology, Niigata University, Ikarashi 2, Niigata 950-2181, Japan;(3) Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, 335 Takashima-cho, Marutamachi-dori Kawaramachi nishi-iru, Kamigyo-ku, Kyoto 602-0878, Japan;(4) Hydrospheric Atmospheric Research Center, Nagoya University, Nagoya, Japan;(5) Faculty of Education and Human Sciences, Niigata University, Ikarashi, Niigata, Japan;(6) Department of Chemistry, Jahangirnagar University, Savar, Dhaka, 1342, Bangladesh |
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Abstract: | The extensive extraction of arsenic (As)-contaminated groundwaters for drinking, household and agricultural purposes represents a serious health concern in many districts of Bangladesh. This laboratory-based incubation study investigated the sources and mechanisms of As mobilization in these groundwaters. Several incubation studies were carried out using sediments collected from the Bangladesh aquifer that were supplemented, or not, with different nutrients, followed by an analysis of the sediment suspensions for pH, ORP (oxidation-reduction potential), EC (electrical conductivity) and As and Fe(II) concentrations. In the substrate-amended sediment suspensions incubated under anaerobic environment, there was a mobilization of As (maximum: 50-67 microg/l) and Fe(II) (maximum: 182 microg/l), while the ORP value decreased immediately and drastically (as much as -468 mV to -560 mV) within 5-6 days. In the sediment suspensions incubated under control and aerobic conditions, no significant As mobilization occurred. The simultaneous mobilization of As and Fe(II) from sediments is a strong indication that their mobilization resulted from the reduction of Fe oxyhydroxide by the enhanced activity of indigenous bacteria present in the sediments; this phenomenon also provides insights on the mobilization mechanism of As in groundwater. The concentrations of As in the sediments used in the incubation studies were strongly linked to the gradients of redox potential development that was stimulated by the quantity of organic nutrient (glucose) used. The penetration of surface-derived organic matter into the shallow aquifer may stimulate the activity of microbial communities, thereby leading to a reduction of iron oxyhydroxide and As release. |
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Keywords: | Arsenic Bacteria Biogeochemistry Groundwater Iron oxyhydroxide Organic nutrients |
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