Green synthesis and biotransformation of amorphous Se nanospheres to trigonal 1D Se nanostructures: impact on Se mobility within the concept of radioactive waste disposal
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Ruiz Fresneda, Miguel Ángel; Delgado Martín, Josemaría; Gómez Bolívar, Jaime; Fernández Cantos, María V.; Bosch-Estévez, Germán; Martínez Moreno, Marcos F.; Merroun, Mohamed LarbiEditorial
Environmental Science Nano
Fecha
2018-07-27Referencia bibliográfica
Ruiz Fresneda, M.A. [et al.]. Green synthesis and biotransformation of amorphous Se nanospheres to trigonal 1D Se nanostructures: impact on Se mobility within the concept of radioactive waste disposal. Environ. Sci.: Nano, 2018, 5, 2103. [http://hdl.handle.net/10481/55340].
Patrocinador
This work was supported by the Euratom research and training programme 2014-2018 under grant agreement no. 661880.Resumen
Nuclear waste containing radionuclides including selenium isotopes, Se79, will be disposed of in future
deep geological repositories. Due to the long lifetime of these radioisotopes, studies on the impact of
microbial processes on their chemical speciation would contribute significantly to understanding the risks
associated with these repositories. Here we report a green method for biogenic reduction of SeIJIV), production
of amorphous Se(0) (a-Se) nanospheres and their subsequent transformation to one-dimensional
(1D) trigonal selenium (t-Se) nanostructures using a combination of methods (XRD, STEM/HAADF, HRTEM/
EDX, ESEM, etc.). The bacterial strain used, Stenotrophomonas bentonitica, was isolated from Spanish bentonites
considered as artificial barriers for future Spanish repositories. After 24 h of incubation, 30–200 nm
sized biogenic individual a-Se nanospheres were synthesized and then started to coalesce, forming aggregates
after 48 and 72 h of incubation. The 144 h sample presented a mixture of single crystal and polycrystalline
1D t-Se nanostructures with different shapes (e.g. nanowires, hexagonal, polygonal, etc.) and diameters
of 30–400 nm, in addition to a-Se nanospheres. The HRTEM analysis showed that the 1D
nanostructures presented different lattice spacings corresponding to the (100), (101) and (111) planes of
t-Se. Thus, a-Se nanospheres were initially synthesized and then would transform into t-Se nanostructures.
STEM/HAADF and ESEM revealed that the cells and their extracellular proteins play an important role in this
transformation process. Due to the low solubility of t-Se nanostructures compared to that of a-Se nanospheres
and SeIJIV), the mobility of selenium in future repositories may be significantly reduced.