Abstract

Thallium (Tl) redox state determines its speciation and fate in aqueous environments. Despite the high potential of natural organic matter (NOM) providing the reactive groups to complex and reduce Tl(III), the kinetics and mechanisms by which NOM influences the Tl redox transformation have remained insufficiently understood. Here, we studied the reduction kinetics of Tl(III) in acidic Suwannee River fulvic acid (SRFA) solutions under dark and solar-irradiated conditions. Our results show that the thermal Tl(III) reduction occurs by the reactive organic moieties in SRFA, with the electron-donating capacities of SRFA increased with pH and decreased with [SRFA]/[Tl(III)] ratios. Solar irradiation promoted Tl(III) reduction in SRFA solutions as a result of ligand-to-metal charge transfer (LMCT) within the photoactive Tl(III) species as well as an additional reduction process mediated by a photogenerated superoxide. We demonstrated that the formation of Tl(III)-SRFA complexes decreased the reducibility of Tl(III), with the kinetics dependent on the nature of the binding component and SRFA concentrations. A "three ligand class" kinetics model has been developed and satisfactorily describes Tl(III) reduction kinetics over a range of experimental conditions. The insights presented here should assist in understanding and predicting the NOM-mediated speciation and redox cycle of Tl in a sunlit environment.

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