Arsenic
toxicity and mobility in groundwater depend on its aqueous
speciation. Uncertainty about the methods used for measuring arsenic
speciation in sulfate-reducing environments hampers transport and
fate analyses and the development of in situ remediation approaches
for treating impacted aquifers. New anion-exchange chromatography
methods linked to inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS)
are presented that allow for sample/eluent pH matching. Sample/eluent
pH matching is advantageous to prevent thioarsenic species transformation
during chromatographic separation because species protonation states
remain unaffected, hydroxyl-for-bisulfide ligand substitution is avoided,
and oxidation of reduced arsenic species is minimized. We characterized
model and natural solutions containing mixtures of arsenic oxyanions
with dissolved sulfide and solutions derived from the dissolution
of thioarsenite and thioarsenate solids. In sulfidic solutions containing
arsenite, two thioarsenic species with S/As ratios of 2:1 and 3:1
were important over the pH range from 5.5 to 8.5. The 3:1 thioarsenic
species dominated when disordered As2S3 dissolved
into sulfide-containing solution at pH 5.4. Together with the preferential
formation of arsenite following sample dilution, these data provide
evidence for the formation and detection of thioarsenite species.
This study helps resolve inconsistencies between spectroscopic and
chromatographic evidence regarding the nature of arsenic in sulfidic
waters.
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