Microbial influence in Spanish bentonite slurry microcosms: Unveiling a-year long geochemical evolution and early-stage copper corrosion related to nuclear waste repositories
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/93057Metadatos
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Martinez-Moreno, Marcos F.; Povedano Priego, Cristina; Morales Hidalgo, Mar; Mumford, Adam D.; Aranda Ballesteros, Elisabet; Vilchez-Vargas, Ramiro; Jroundi, Fadwa; Ojeda, Jesus J.; Merroun, Mohamed LarbiEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Spanish bentonite Microbial diversity Electron donors/acceptor Copper corrosion
Fecha
2024-07-02Referencia bibliográfica
Martinez-Moreno, M. F., Povedano-Priego, C., Morales-Hidalgo, M., Mumford, A. D., Aranda, E., Vilchez-Vargas, R., ... & Merroun, M. L. (2024). Microbial influence in Spanish bentonite slurry microcosms: unveiling a-year long geochemical evolution and early-stage copper corrosion related to nuclear waste repositories. Environmental Pollution, 124491.
Patrocinador
The present work was supported by the grant RTI 2018–101548-BI00 “ERDF A way of making Europe” to MLM from the “Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades” (Spanish Government). The project leading to this application has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under grant agreement No 847593 to MLMResumen
The deep geological repository (DGR) concept consists of storing radioactive waste in metal canisters, surrounded
by compacted bentonite, and placed deeply into a geological formation. Here, bentonite slurry microcosms
with copper canisters, inoculated with bacterial consortium and amended with acetate, lactate and
sulfate were set up to investigate their geochemical evolution over a year under anoxic conditions. The impact of
microbial communities on the corrosion of the copper canisters in an early-stage (45 days) was also assessed. The
amended bacterial consortium and electron donors/acceptor accelerated the microbial activity, while the heatshocked
process had a retarding effect. The microbial communities partially oxidize lactate to acetate, which is
subsequently consumed when the lactate is depleted. Early-stage microbial communities showed that the bacterial
consortium reduced microbial diversity with Pseudomonas and Stenotrophomonas dominating the community.
However, sulfate-reducing bacteria such as Desulfocurvibacter, Anaerosolibacter, and Desulfosporosinus
were enriched coupling oxidation of lactate/acetate with reduction of sulfates. The generated biogenic sulfides,
which could mediate the conversion of copper oxides (possibly formed by trapped oxygen molecules on the
bentonite or driven by the reduction of H2O) to copper sulfide (Cu2S), were identified by X-ray photoelectron
spectroscopy (XPS). Overall, these findings shed light on the ideal geochemical conditions that would affect the
stability of DGR barriers, emphasizing the impact of the SRB on the corrosion of the metal canisters, the gas
generation, and the interaction with components of the bentonite.