%0 Journal Article %T Zinc Presence during Mineral Formation Affects the Sorptive Reactivity of Manganese Oxide %A Chenning Li %A Emily M. Saad %A Pan Liu %A Rixiang Huang %A Shiliang Zhao %A Yuanzhi Tang %J - %D 2018 %R https://doi.org/10.3390/soilsystems2020019 %X Abstract The sorptive reactivity of layered manganese (Mn) oxides is controlled by their layer and interlayer structure, which can be affected by processes such as metal coprecipitation. This study investigated the effects of Zn coprecipitation on the sorptive reactivity of ¦Ä-MnO 2, a common layered Mn oxide mineral. Selected cation (i.e., Cd) and anion (i.e., phosphate and arsenate) species were used to probe the changes in ¦Ä-MnO 2 sorptive reactivity. Cd uptake by ¦Ä-MnO 2 was suppressed by Zn coprecipitation but total metal uptake (Cd and Zn) was enhanced, indicating more available vacancy sites (e.g., smaller particle size and higher vacancy site density) in Zn-coprecipitated ¦Ä-MnO 2. Phosphate and arsenate sorption on ¦Ä-MnO 2 was significantly enhanced by Zn-coprecipitation, and the enhancement was more effective compared to Zn sorption on pure ¦Ä-MnO 2. X-ray diffraction and X-ray adsorption spectroscopy analysis did not detect the formation of surface precipitations and/or ternary complexes. The enhanced anion sorption on Zn-coprecipitated ¦Ä-MnO 2 was likely due to the compensation of negative surface charge by sorbed Zn, as well as the structural modifications introduced by Zn coprecipitation. Results from this study can provide a better understanding on the interactions between metal-coprecipitated Mn oxides and other species in natural environments. View Full-Tex %K manganese oxides %K zinc %K coprecipitation %K sorption %K cadmium %K arsenate %K phosphate %U https://www.mdpi.com/2571-8789/2/2/19