“…Iron oxides (i.e., goethite and hematite) with concentrations from a few Ī¼g/L to several hundred mg/L are ubiquitously present in natural environment such as in soil and sediment . Since they can interact with different substances, iron oxides have been demonstrated to play important roles on the fate, transport, and cycling of nutrients or contaminants in soil and subsurface environments. ā For instance, many previous studies found that iron oxides could serve as mobile carrier for a wide of range of colloids such as dissolved organic matter, nanoscale titanium dioxide, bacteria, , and viruses, heavy metals such as lead, arsenic, and copper, , radioactive substances such as strontium and plutonium, and nutrients such as phosphorus , and sulfur . Hence, the fate and transport of iron oxides in porous media has drawn great attentions in past decades.…”