Title: Reaction Calculations
1Reaction Calculations
or
EQUILIBRATION REACTOR
2EQUILIBRIUM REACTIONS
- SURFACE
- EXCHANGE
- SOLID_SOLUTIONS
- EQUILIBRIUM_PHASES
- GAS_PHASE
- MIX
3NON-EQUILIBRIUM REACTIONS
- REACTION
- REACTION_TEMPERATURE
- KINETICS
4CONCEPTUAL MODEL
- Define initial solution (or mixture of initial
solutions). - 2. Define irreversible REACTION
- 3. Define EQUILIBRIUM_PHASES
- Moles of each phase
- SI or gas partial pressure
5Reactions
6MIX One or more SOLUTIONS
- Type solution number
- Type mixing fraction
7R.1. Exercise Implicit Redox Reactionsmg/L
- Define rainwater as SOLUTION 1 with log partial
pressure of O2 -0.7 and CO2 -3.5. - Define END.
- Define MIX by using solution 1 and mixing
fraction 1. - Define END.
- Run.
8R.2. Questions
- 1. Explain the differences between the initial
solution composition and the reaction (mixed)
solution composition, particularly pH, pe, N(5),
N(0), and N(-3).
9Reactions
10SAVE and USE
- Save results of calculations
- Use previously defined SOLUTIONS,
EQUILIBRIUM_PHASES, REACTIONs, etc - Use previously SAVEd SOLUTIONS,
EQUILBRIUM_PHASES, etc
11SAVE results from a Reaction Calculation
Index numbers are used to keep track Index
numbers do not need to be sequential
- Note SOLUTION defines an initial solution
calculation, which is automatically saved.
12USE Previously defined or SAVEd
- USE includes KINETICS, MIX, REACTION, and
REACTION_TEMPERATURE - Can USE previously SAVEd EQUILIBRIUM_PHASES,
EXCHANGE, SOLID_SOLUTION, SOLUTION, or SURFACE
13Initial Solution and Reaction Calculations
14REACTION Reactants and stoichiometry
- Choose phase or type formula
- Define relative stoichiometry
15REACTION Reaction amounts
- Steps are a number of equal increments
- or
- Steps are a specified list
- Specify units
16Initial Solution and Reaction CalculationsThe
inscrutable END
- Initial Solution/Speciation calculationevery
SOLUTION - Reaction calculationSOLUTION reactant before
END - Reactant may be any reactant keyword data block
- USE can define solution or reactant
- ENDDo speciation and reaction
- ENDdefines a Simulation
17Speciation and Reaction CalculationsThe
inscrutable END
- Simulation 1
- Speciation calculation solution 1
- Speciation calculation solution 2
- Reaction calculation
- SOLUTION 1
- EQUILIBRIUM_PHASES 2
- REACTION 3
- Simulation 2
- Speciation calculation solution 3
- Reaction calculation
- SOLUTION 2
- EQUILIBRIUM_PHASES 1
- REACTION 3
- Simulation 3
- No speciation calculation
- No reaction calculationNo Reactant defined
18R.3. Exercise Sequential Reactions
- Make an unsaturated zone water. Build on previous
exercise with rainwater. Add SAVE solution 2
after MIX step and before END. After the END, add
USE solution 2 and equilibrate (EQUILIBRIUM_PHASES
) with CO2, log partial pressure 2, and calcite
(SI 0), save solution as solution 3. - Use solution 3, add 1 mmol CO2 (REACTION),
equilibrate with calcite (EQUILIBRIUM_PHASES),
save as solution 4.
19R.4. Questions
- What is the log pCO2 of the rainwater, rainwater,
in redox equilibrium (the mixture), the mixture
equilibrated with CO2 and calcite, and after
reaction with CO2? - How many millimoles of calcite and CO2 reacted to
make solution 3? - How many millimoles of calcite reacted to make
solution 4 from solution 3?
20R.5. Extra Credit Exercise
- Use MIX and REACTION to evaporate rainwater 20
fold (at constant pCO2) before reaction with CO2
and calcite. Hint You must remove water and
water has 55.5 mol per kg.
21Reactions
22Dedolomitization
- Anhydrite dissolution
- Calcite precipitation
- Dolomite dissolution
23R.6. Exercise
- Make a ground water with log pCO2 -2,
equilibrium with calcite and dolomite. - React 50 mmol of anhydrite (CaSO4) in increments
of 10 mmol. Maintain equilibrium with calcite and
dolomite, allow anhydrite to precipitate if it
becomes saturated.
24R.7. Questions
- What trends do you expect in water composition
with anhydrite-driven dedolomitization? - Why is the following reaction misleading?
- CaSO4 CaMg(CO3)2 2CaCO3 Mg2 SO4-2
- 3. How does the water composition change from
step 4 to step 5?
25R.8. QuestionsPlummer and Sprinkle, 2001mg/L,
S(-2) as H2S
- 1. Are these the trends of dedolomitization?
- 2. Anything else?
26EQUILIBRIUM_PHASEDissolve Only
- Force mineral not to precipitate
27R.9. Extra Credit Exercise
- Equilibrate seawater (major ions only) with
calcite and dolomite. - Make a ground water with log pCO2 -2,
equilibrium with calcite and dolomite. - Mix ground water with seawater in fractions of
.25, 0.5, .75. Maintain equilibrium with calcite
allow dolomite only to dissolve.
28R.10. Questions
- What reaction is calculated for seawater
equilibration with calcite and dolomite? - What reactions are calculated for a carbonate
reactions for the ground-water/seawater mixtures?
29Reactions
30Organic Decomposition
- Sequential removal of electron acceptors, usually
in the sequence - O2
- NO3-
- MnO2
- Fe(OH)3
- SO4-2
- HCO3-
31Redox Environments
- OxicDissolved O2 reduction
- CH2O O2 CO2 H2O
- Post-oxicNO3-, MnO2, Fe(OH)3 reduction
- CH2O 4Fe(OH)3 7CO2 4Fe2 8HCO3- 3H2O
- SulfidicSO4-2 reduction
- 2CH2O SO4-2 2HCO3- H2S
- MethanicCH4
- CH2O CO2 CH4
32Redox Environments
33R.11. Exercise
- Dilute seawater by 50 percent.
- React diluted seawater with 50 mmol of CH2O in
steps of 0.1, 0.2, 10, 20, 30, 40, and 50 mmol.
Equilibrate with .1 moles of Fe(OH)3(a) and 0.0
mol of mackinawite. - Print moles of reaction (-rxn) and total
concentrations of O(0), C(4), C(-4), Fe(2),
Fe(3), S(6), S(-2) (-totals) to the
selected-output file (SELECTED_OUTPUT).
34R.12. Questions
- What sequence of electron acceptors is used?
- Where is Fe(3) important?
- Use Excel to plot the concentrations in the
selected-output file (rxn is the x variable, set
first line rxn from 99 to 0, omit
d_mackinawite). - 4. Why is C(4) not a straight line?
- 5. Why does Fe(2) increase after 30 mmol of CH2O
is reacted. - Should a gas bubble form?
- What trends are observed for sulfate reduction?
35R.13. QuestionsPotomac Estuary Sediments
- How is this similar to the sulfate reduction
simulation results? - How does this differ from the simulation results?
36R.14. Exercise
- React pure water with 10 mmol of CH2O, maintain
equilibrium with barite.
37R.15. Questions
- What is the barium concentration in mg/L?
- Are there reactions other than sulfate reduction?
- What other reactions could affect barium?
38Sulfate ReductionNorman Landfill
- Barium concentration appears insignificant unless
barium is lost to cation exchange or mineral
precipitation.
39R.16. Extra Credit Exercise
- At pH 7.0, determine the pe indicated when
concentrations are equal for each redox state of
the following redox couples As(5)/As(3),
C(4)/C(-4), Fe(3)/Fe(2), N(5)/N(0), N(5)/N(-3),
N(0)/N(-3), O2(/H2O), S(6)/S(-2), U(6)/U(4). - Hint Use only SOLUTION and enter 1 umol/kgw of
each valence state. - No entry is allowed in SOLUTION for H2O.
40R.17. Questions
- Iron is soluble as reduced ferrous iron, uranium
is soluble as oxidized U(6). As organic carbon
reacts, which would you observe first (a)
increase in iron, (b) decrease in uranium? - Thermodynamically, which nitrogen species to you
expect to see in an oxygenated ground water? In a
methanic water?
41Cape Cod Sewage Plume
- Iron reduction
- No sulfate reduction
Blue Plains, Washington D.C. Potomac River
Sediment Pore Water
- Iron reduction
- Minor sulfate reduction
- Intense methanogenesis
42Reactions
43Sulfide Oxidation
- Pyrite/Marcasite are most important reactants
- Need Pyrite, Oxygen, Water, and bugs
- Oxidation of pyrite and formation of ferric
hydroxide complexes and minerals generates acidic
conditions
44R.18. Exercise
- React the pure water with 10 mmol of pyrite,
maintaining equilibrium with atmosphreric oxygen. - React the pure water with 10 mmol of mackinawite,
maintaining equilibrium with atmosphreric oxygen. - React the pure water with 10 mmol of sphalerite,
maintaining equilibrium with atmosphreric oxygen.
45R.19. Questions
- Write qualitative reactions that explain the pH
of the 3 solutions. - What pH buffer starts to operate at pHs below 3?
- Run the input file with wateq4f.dat database.
What minerals may precipitate during pyrite
oxidation?
46R.20. Extra Credit Exercise
- React the pure water with 20 mmol of pyrite,
maintaining equilibrium with atmospheric oxygen
and goethite. - Acid mine drainage is usually treated with
limestone. Use the results of exercise 1 and
equilibrate with O2, Fe(OH)3(a), and calcite.
47R.21. Questions
- Write a net reaction for the PHREEQC results for
the low-pH simulation. - Looking at the results of the calcite-equilibrated
simulation, what additional reactions should be
considered?
48Picher Oklahoma Abandoned Pb/Zn Minemg/L
- Mines are suboxic
- Carbonates are present
- Iron oxidizes in stream
49Reactions
- Aluminosilicate reactions
50Aluminosilicate Reactions
- Disseminated calcite important in silicate
terranes
- Bowen (Goldich) reaction series
Ca-Feldspar Plagioclase Na-Feldspar K-Feldspar Mus
covite Quartz
- Olivine
- Pyroxene (augite)
- Amphibole (hornblende)
- Biotite mica
51Aluminosilicates
- Primary minerals react to form gibbsite,
kaolinite, smectite, zeolites, SiO2 - Thermodynamic data is not reliable
- Compositional uncertainties
- Range of stabilities
- Difficulty of measurement
- Kinetics are slow
52Add Reactant to Phase Boundary
- KAlSiO8 is added (or removed) until gibbsite
equilibrium is reached - Amount is amount of KAlSiO8, not gibbsite
53R.22. Exercise (phreeqc.dat)
- Dissolve just enough K-feldspar (KAlSi3O8) to
come to equilibrium with gibbsite. - Dissolve just enough K-feldspar to come to
equilibrium with kaolinite. - Dissolve just enough K-feldspar to come to
equilibrium with K-mica.
54R.23. Questions
- Given the thermodynamic data, which mineral
should precipitate first? - Does quartz need to be included in this
calculation?
55Sierra Nevada Springsmmol/kgw
- Increase in Ca, Alkalinity, pH
- Increase in SiO2
- Slight increase in Mg, K, Cl, SO4
56Summary
- MIX
- EQUILIBRIUM_PHASES
- REACTION
57Summary
- Carbonate minerals and CO2
- Dedolomitization
- Organic decomposition
- Sulfate reduction
- Other electron acceptors O2, NO3, FeOOH, CH2O
- Sulfide oxidation
- Aluminosilicate reactions