The Abiotic Nitrite Oxidation by Ligand-Bound Manganese (III): The Chemical Mechanism

AQUATIC GEOCHEMISTRY(2021)

引用 1|浏览2
暂无评分
摘要
Given their environmental abundances, it has been long hypothesized that geochemical interactions between reactive forms of manganese and nitrogen may play important roles in the cycling of these elements. Indeed, recent studies have begun shedding light on the possible role of soluble, ligand-bound Mn(III) in promoting abiotic transformations under environmentally relevant conditions. Here, using the kinetic data of Karolewski et al. (Geochim Cosmochim Acta 293:365–378, 2021), we provide the chemical mechanism for the abiotic oxidation of nitrite (NO 2 − ) by Mn(III)-pyrophosphate, Mn III PP, to form nitrate (NO 3 − ). Nitrous acid (HNO 2 ), not NO 2 − , is the reductant in the reaction, based on thermodynamic and kinetic considerations. As soluble Mn(III) complexes react in a one-electron transfer reaction, two one-electron transfer steps must occur. In step one, HNO 2 is first oxidized to nitrogen dioxide, ·NO 2 , a free radical via a hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) reaction. We show that this inner sphere reaction process is the rate-limiting step in the reaction sequence. In step two, ·NO 2 reacts with a second Mn III PP complex to form the nitronium ion (NO 2 + ), which is isoelectronic with CO 2 . Unlike the poor electron-accepting capability of CO 2 , NO 2 + is an excellent electron acceptor for both OH − and H 2 O, so NO 2 + reacts quickly with water to form the end-product NO 3 − (step 3 in the reaction sequence). Thus, water provides the O atom in this nitrification reaction in accordance with the O-isotope data. This work provides mechanistic perspective on a potentially important interaction between Mn and nitrogen species, thereby offering a framework in which to interpret kinetic and isotopic data and to further investigate the relevance of this reaction under environmental conditions.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要