2006 Philadelphia Annual Meeting (22–25 October 2006)

Paper No. 10
Presentation Time: 10:45 AM

NEW TOOLS AND CONCEPTS FOR UNDERSTANDING THE EVOLUTION OF MINERAL SURFACE AREA FOR EXTRAPOLATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL DISSOLUTION KINETICS


WASHTON, Nancy M.1, MUELLER, Karl T.1, DAVIS, Michael1, KUBICKI, James2, BANDSTRA, Joel3, MOORE, Joel4 and BRANTLEY, Susan L.5, (1)Chemistry, Penn State University, 104 Chemistry Building, University Park, PA 16802, (2)Geosciences, Penn State University, 335 Deike bldg, University Park, 16802, (3)Geosciences, Penn State University, 226D Earth & Engineering Sciences, University Park, 16802, (4)Department of Geosciences, Penn State University, University Park, PA 16801, (5)Geosciences, Penn State University, 2217 Earth & Engineering Sciences, Department of Chemistry, University Park, PA 16802, nam@chem.psu.edu

To extrapolate geochemical kinetics of abiotic mineral-water dissolution reactions across scales, one must quantify the rate constants for reaction, activities of solution species involved in the reaction, and the surface area or reactivity of the mineral-water interface. While significant effort has focused on modeling rate constants as a function of mineral and solution composition, the complexities involved in measuring and predicting the mineral-water interfacial area and reactivity have not been systematically addressed. In general, the surface area and reactivity are coupled to dissolution since we know that roughness and reactivity vary as the dissolving surface evolves. In some cases, however, roughness, reactivity, and surface site density may reach steady state values. We have begun an investigation to compare the reaction kinetics of clusters of molecules modeled with density functional techniques to the stochastic evolution of model mineral surfaces and to NMR measurements related to reactive surface area. Such a comparison will yield conceptual tools to predict temporal evolution of the surface area and reactivity terms, and should further our capacity to predict environmental dissolution kinetics.