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1 phobic basal surfaces of kaolinite, a common clay mineral.
2 icients to one reference OM material and one clay mineral.
3 nts and to be poorly adsorbed onto untreated clay mineral.
4 iosity rover, which also identified smectite clay minerals.
5 as amorphous iron phases, organic matter and clay minerals.
6 sociated with clay minerals, and (iii) Fe in clay minerals.
7 c matter (OM) and sorption to phyllosilicate clay minerals.
8 ndant in montmorillonite and other expanding clay minerals.
9 n aquatic environment will be with suspended clay minerals.
10 ctroscopic signatures of water in two unique clay minerals.
11 the substituting cations in the TOT-layer of clay minerals.
12 interlayer region of swelling 2:1 layer type clay minerals.
13  REE are inferred to be weakly adsorbed onto clay minerals.
14 f redox sensitive elements on the surface of clay minerals.
15 ell-ordered member of the kaolin subgroup of clay minerals.
16  layer typically contains water and hydrated clay minerals.
17 idence that C compounds were associated with clay minerals.
18 ansformations and microstructural changes in clay minerals.
19 h the dominant constituents of soils such as clay minerals.
20 luence the sorption processes at surfaces of clay minerals.
21 quid water during this time to form hydrated clay minerals.
22 o study directly due to dilution by detrital clay minerals.
23 also adsorbed to clay minerals and OM-coated clay minerals.
24 mmediately that initiates release of As from clay minerals.
25  in barite, sphene, chalcedony, apatite, and clay minerals.
26 d in the U(VI) sorption curves for the three clay minerals.
27 by bioreduced (and pasteurized) iron-bearing clay minerals.
28 mechanism for Fe atom exchange in Fe-bearing clay minerals.
29 d different reduction potentials (Eh) of the clay minerals.
30  The citrate (10 mM) + Mn(II) (182.02 muM) + clay minerals (3% w/v) system in SDOC accounted for comp
31                                              Clay minerals abound in sedimentary formations and the i
32 el shows that sorption of organic cations to clay minerals accounts for more than 90% of the overall
33 he reductant, Mn(II) was a catalyst, and the clay minerals acted as an accelerator for both the reduc
34 mestone) and aluminosilicate (e.g., calcined clay) mineral additives are routinely used to partially
35 ell as in engineered environments, and while clay minerals' adsorption properties have been studied e
36                                          The clay minerals also serve as a sink for Cr(III).
37                                     Water in clay minerals, ammoniated phyllosilicates, or a mixture
38  aqueous Cr(VI) with two abiotically reduced clay minerals: an Fe-poor montmorillonite and an Fe-rich
39 e electron transfer between structural Fe in clay minerals and a vitreous carbon working electrode in
40 erent forms of structural clay-Fe(II) in the clay minerals and different reduction potentials (Eh) of
41     These results suggest the coevolution of clay minerals and early metabolites in our planet could
42 ifficult due to a lack of reactivity between clay minerals and electrodes.
43  between aqueous Fe(II) and structural Fe in clay minerals and electron conduction in octahedral shee
44 scribe for the first time synthetic smectite clay minerals and Fe-sulfide microspheres that reproduce
45                                           As clay minerals and humic substances are important soil co
46 cs of Cr(VI) reduction by Fe(II/III)-bearing clay minerals and may improve predictions of Cr(VI) beha
47 ssociated with palaeosols, the weathering of clay minerals and microbially induced sedimentary struct
48 for further studies on the sorption of Tl to clay minerals and Mn-oxides and its impact on Tl solubil
49         Surprisingly, U was also adsorbed to clay minerals and OM-coated clay minerals.
50 m, oxytetracycline) with two aluminosilicate clay minerals and one soil.
51 tals can be associated with soil components (clay minerals and organic matter), biosolid application
52  the high capacity for binding of arsenic to clay minerals and oxides of iron and aluminum in subsoil
53                                              Clay minerals and pedogenic metal (oxyhydr)oxides are th
54 are remarkably preserved by a combination of clay minerals and phosphate, with clay minerals providin
55  the fossils are composed of aluminosilicate clay minerals and some carbon, a composition comparable
56 s, Zn incorporated in dioctahedral layers of clay minerals and Zn sorbed to amorphous silica.
57 fundamental structure and composition of the clay minerals) and "external" (caused by a force externa
58 ticles, (ii) Fe-(hydr)oxides associated with clay minerals, and (iii) Fe in clay minerals.
59 n surface areas and equilibrium constants of clay minerals, and cation exchange capacity.
60 mentally relevant surfaces (Fe (hydr)oxides, clay minerals, and soil from Arizona and the Saharan Des
61                                   Fe-bearing clay minerals are abundant in argillaceous rocks as thei
62 In contrast, Fe-(hydr)oxides associated with clay minerals are dispersed by both extractants.
63                                              Clay minerals are efficient sinks for heavy metals in th
64                                   Serpentine clay minerals are found in many geological settings.
65 vior of iron (Fe(aq)(2+) -> Fe(surf)(3+)) in clay minerals are fundamental for environmental geochemi
66                                              Clay minerals are implicated in the retention of biomole
67                                              Clay minerals are layer type aluminosilicates that figur
68 ics and pathways of Cr(VI) reduction by such clay minerals are poorly understood.
69                      Widespread iron-bearing clay minerals are potential materials that can reduce an
70                                              Clay minerals are principally Fe-Mg illite, mixed layers
71                            We also find that clay minerals are relatively unimportant ice nuclei.
72                               Assemblages of clay minerals are routinely used as proxies for paleocli
73 idence that Fe(II) uptake characteristics on clay minerals are strongly correlated to the redox prope
74              Illite-smectite interstratified clay minerals are ubiquitous in sedimentary basins and t
75      Among all natural submicrosized phases, clay minerals are ubiquitous in soils and sedimentary ro
76                                              Clay minerals are ubiquitous in subsurface environments
77                                 Iron-bearing clay minerals are ubiquitous in the environment, and the
78 ity toward reductive dissolution, Fe-bearing clay minerals are viewed as a renewable source of Fe red
79                                     On Mars, clay minerals are widespread in terrains that date back
80                         Iron(II/III)-bearing clay minerals are widespread potential reductants of Cr(
81 Unique surface properties of aluminosilicate clay minerals arise from anisotropic distribution of sur
82 rals as well as the importance of Fe-bearing clay minerals as a renewable source of redox equivalents
83 lues underscore the importance of Fe-bearing clay minerals as redox-active phases in a wide range of
84 sms of abiotic and microbial Fe reduction in clay minerals as well as the importance of Fe-bearing cl
85 st that iron adsorbs on the edge surfaces of clay minerals at distinct structural sites commonly refe
86                                              Clay mineral-bearing locations have been targeted for ma
87 biologically formed structural Fe(II) in the clay minerals became increasingly important.
88 Lewis acid, titanium tetrachloride, with the clay mineral Bentonite K-10.
89  surfaces of mica (a common alumino-silicate clay mineral) bridged or "glued" by mfp-3.
90 ecause of its weak interlayer interaction, a clay mineral can be treated as two separate low-dimensio
91                        Iron-bearing smectite clay minerals can act as electron sources and sinks in t
92 sequent reduction of U(VI) on Fe(II)-bearing clay minerals can control the mobility of uranium in sub
93 e that electron transfer to structural Fe in clay minerals can occur from Fe(II) sorbed to both basal
94 39Ar during neutron irradiation in dating of clay minerals can produce erroneously old ages.
95                         This work shows that clay minerals can provide an exceptionally high fidelity
96  reverse tricarboxylic acid (rTCA) cycle and clay mineral catalysts coevolved remains a mystery in th
97 kely to have played an essential role in any clay mineral-catalyzed prebiotic RNA synthesis.
98 mated cation-exchange capacity attributed to clay minerals (CECCLAY).
99 ing secondary Fe oxyhydroxide, Al(OH)(3), or clay mineral colloids, suggesting that the V is not bioa
100  general term for the dioctahedral mica-like clay mineral common in sedimentary rocks, especially sha
101               Talc, as an important class of clay minerals constituting subducting oceanic crust, has
102                                   Fe-bearing clay minerals contain structural iron that can be redox-
103 r reaction controlling its mobilization, and clay minerals could mitigate As mobilization with surfac
104  and geochemical evidence for an increase in clay mineral deposition in the Neoproterozoic that immed
105 pidly than biologically reduced iron-bearing clay minerals despite the minerals having similar struct
106 (II) in both low (SWy-2) and high (NAu-1) Fe clay minerals did not reduce PCE or TCE under anoxic con
107 increase in reduction potential results from clay mineral dissolution resulting in increased Fe(III)
108 -toxic ionic aluminium (Al(3+)) species from clay minerals, driving the evolution of counteractive ad
109 that hinders N(2)O(5) uptake as well as 10 A-clay minerals (e.g., Illite) that compete with water and
110 Sr isotope ratios, trace element content and clay mineral evidence, that carbonates bearing the (13)C
111 t exchange by calcium for sodium residing on clay mineral exchange sites.
112  production of pedogenic clay minerals (the "clay mineral factory"), leading to increased marine buri
113 aster HCA reduction occurred with decreasing clay mineral Fe content.
114 -content clay mineral SWy-2, suggesting that clay mineral Fe controlled the formation of the reactive
115 taminant reduction, yet our knowledge of how clay mineral Fe reduction pathways and Fe reduction exte
116 tion pathways and Fe reduction extent affect clay mineral Fe(II) reactivity is limited.
117                        Our data suggest that clay mineral Fe(III) is a sink for electrons from added
118                               In addition to clay minerals, Fe(III) oxides particles have recently be
119 iments motivated by the hypothesis that some clay mineral formation may have occurred under oxidized
120 arly Hesperian or younger age indicates that clay mineral formation on Mars extended beyond Noachian
121 tmosphere, and the (18)O/(16)O of authigenic clay minerals formed in these environs reflect those enr
122                                   Authigenic clay minerals formed on or in the seafloor occur in ever
123                                  Fe(II)-rich clay minerals found in subsurface redox transition zones
124 ic composition of hydroxyl groups (OH(-)) in clay minerals from a highly expanded PETM section in the
125 admixed with less soluble salts, the lack of clay minerals from acid-rock reactions, high sphericity
126 E distinguishes Fe(III) reduction of layered clay minerals from that of Fe oxyhydroxides, where accum
127 redox interactions between sorbed Fe(II) and clay minerals gained in this study is essential for futu
128                                        Among clay minerals, halloysite nanotubes (HNTs) possess a neg
129 tics of redox reactions involving Fe-bearing clay minerals has been challenging due to the inability
130 e of simple oxide surfaces: edge surfaces of clay minerals have a variable proton surface charge aris
131 e is a degree of site masking in the ternary clay mineral-humic acid-bacteria composite.
132 This work investigated REE adsorption to the clay minerals illite and kaolinite through pH adsorption
133               Sorption to the phyllosilicate clay minerals Illite, kaolinite, and bentonite has been
134           In montmorillonite (MMT), a common clay mineral in soils, sediments, and muds, the swelling
135 ndings provide new insights into the role of clay minerals in As transformation, which is significant
136                               Iron occurs in clay minerals in both ferric and ferrous forms.
137 tering or preservational effects of detrital clay minerals in modern marine continental margin depoce
138  Our results demonstrate the significance of clay minerals in the (trans)formation of Mn-containing p
139 i(4)O(10)(OH)(2)), one of the representative clay minerals in the alumina-silica-water (Al(2)O(3)-SiO
140 f depositional heterogeneous distribution of clay minerals in the pores.
141 ium are mobilized from exchangeable sites on clay minerals in the shale formations during the hydraul
142 ificant role of kaolinite (Kln), a pervasive clay mineral, in enhancing As(V) immobilization during f
143 lution of the smectite-to-illite sequence of clay minerals, including the nature of coexisting specie
144     Our finding of 5-20% Fe atom exchange in clay minerals indicates that we need to rethink how Fe m
145                                              Clay minerals inter-finger with calcium phosphate that c
146 e insights into how atmospheric dust-derived clay minerals interact with marine microorganisms to enh
147 e the importance of soil pH, enzyme-, and OP-clay mineral interactions in controlling the mineralizat
148  Such comprehensive knowledge of PFAS at the clay mineral interface is critical to developing novel s
149 aveling the surface geochemistry of hydrated clay minerals is an abiding, if difficult, topic in eart
150                             Structural Fe in clay minerals is an important redox-active species in ma
151                             Structural Fe in clay minerals is an important, albeit poorly characteriz
152                             Structural Fe in clay minerals is an important, potentially renewable sou
153               Herein, the crystallization of clay minerals is catalyzed by succinate, an example of a
154 ise the question whether Fe interaction with clay minerals is more dynamic than previously thought.
155               The interaction of Fe(II) with clay minerals is of particular relevance in global geoch
156 that: (1) As desorption/adsorption from/onto clay minerals is the major reaction controlling its mobi
157      Microdiffraction imaging identified the clay mineral kaolinite to play a key role in the immobil
158 th (13)C-labelled amino acids and two common clay minerals (kaolinite and montmorillonite).
159  sequestration by a lanthanum (La) exchanged clay mineral (La-Bentonite), which is extensively used i
160   Instead catalysis is shown to occur at the clay mineral lattice-edge where hydroxyl groups and expo
161 electron transfer from the inner part of the clay mineral layer structure to the reactive sites.
162 onates (<10 percent), olivine (<10 percent), clay minerals (&lt;20 percent), and quartz (<5 percent) in
163 ps developed for these four commonly studied clay minerals may be applied to future studies intereste
164 oxhydroxides, and V-bearing Al(OH)(3) and/or clay minerals may have occurred.
165 ding that the infrared absorptivity of fired clay minerals, measured at the Si-O-Si stretching resona
166 tion can alter the stability of nanoparticle/clay mineral mixtures.
167 electron donor, we found that the Fe-bearing clay minerals montmorillonite SWy-2 and nontronite NAu-2
168 we report that citrate along with Mn(II) and clay minerals (montmorillonite and kaolinite) reduce Cr(
169 on rate constants by bioreduced iron-bearing clay minerals (montmorillonite SWy-2 and nontronite NAu-
170 neral matrix (containing structural water of clay minerals) must be separated from SOM and samples ne
171                                A Na-smectite clay mineral (Na-Mt) was exchanged with various amounts
172 n of the sorption properties of three source clay minerals-Na-rich montmorillonite (SWy-2), illite-sm
173 plane-sorbed Fe(II) to structural Fe(III) in clay mineral NAu-1 at pH 4.0 and 6.0 occurred but to a m
174 sorbed to basal planes and edge OH-groups of clay mineral NAu-1.
175 We calculated that 5-20% of structural Fe in clay minerals NAu-1, NAu-2, and SWa-1 exchanged with aqu
176 ditions are needed to synthesize the Fe-rich clay mineral nontronite at low temperatures.
177 h, it closely resembles the structure of the clay mineral nontronite, a representative of the Fe-rich
178 s arsenate) adsorption to the phyllosilicate clay minerals of the aquifer.
179  demonstrated the rapid formation of Fe-rich clay minerals of variable crystallinity from aqueous Fe(
180 pes, chemical index of alteration (CIA), and clay minerals) of two well-dated Triassic-Jurassic (T-J)
181                                              Clay minerals often contain redox-active structural iron
182       We investigated the role of Fe-bearing clay minerals on the bioreduction of nitrobenzene.
183 s or sheaths, which are instead preserved by clay minerals or francolite.
184 nding to montmorillonite (an aluminosilicate clay mineral) or clay-enriched soils had been shown to e
185                                   Today most clay minerals originate in biologically active soils, so
186 culations, Fe(II) located at the edge of the clay mineral particles alone cannot account for the fast
187  Here we explore the distribution of natural clay mineral particles in poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)/de
188 idal size and permanent structural charge of clay mineral particles, which endow them with significan
189 on and suggest that RMI formation depends on clay mineral presence and Fe content.
190 we demonstrate a causal relationship between clay mineral production by the melting Sturtian Snowball
191                                              Clay minerals provide a useful model system for studying
192 ination of clay minerals and phosphate, with clay minerals providing the highest fidelity of preserva
193 flood inefficiency include low permeability, clay mineral reactivity and fluid incompatibility.
194 chemically reduced (dithionite) iron-bearing clay minerals reduced nitrobenzene more rapidly than bio
195         Here, we evaluated whether Fe(II) in clay minerals reduces tetrachloroethene (PCE) and trichl
196  nonlinear relationship of rate constant and clay mineral reduction potential E(H) have major implica
197                    The surface reactivity of clay minerals remains challenging to characterize becaus
198 ce of iron-rich carbonate relative to common clay minerals requires a minimum partial pressure of car
199  0.15) owing to the presence of the smectite clay mineral saponite, which is one of the weakest phyll
200 ell-graded soil grain size distribution, and clay minerals serving as cementing agents in the nest so
201                    Moreover, the presence of clay minerals slows methane production and reduces final
202 erlayer cation, the greater the influence of clay mineral structure and hydrophobicity on the configu
203  to electron equivalents retained within the clay mineral structure.
204 ociated with Mg and Al and is likely part of clay minerals such as illite.
205             Our results suggest that Fe-rich clay minerals such as nontronite can form rapidly under
206 (hydr)oxides were dominantly associated with clay minerals, suggesting that their dispersion as free
207  interlayer cations with water molecules and clay mineral surface oxygens is governed largely by cati
208      Adsorption and redox transformations on clay mineral surfaces are prevalent in surface environme
209      Yet, a molecular-level understanding of clay mineral surfaces has been hampered by the lack of a
210 diments, adsorption of carbon compounds onto clay mineral surfaces played a fundamental role in the b
211  electrical double layers formed on hydrated clay mineral surfaces, particularly those in the interla
212 he complexation of inorganic contaminants on clay mineral surfaces, they also evidenced the reliabili
213 /precipitation), and surface complexation on clay mineral surfaces.
214 eral dissolution and surface complexation on clay mineral surfaces.
215 CE after adding 5 mM dissolved Fe(II) to the clay mineral suspensions.
216 y mineral Syn-1 > Fe(OH)(2) > low Fe-content clay mineral SWy-2, suggesting that clay mineral Fe cont
217 e observed in the presence of low Fe-content clay mineral SWy-2.
218 E products decreased in the order of Fe-free clay mineral Syn-1 > Fe(OH)(2) > low Fe-content clay min
219 ons containing 20 mM Fe(II) alone or Fe-free clay mineral (Syn-1), we observed a purely Fe(II)-contai
220  approach is applied to study collections of clay mineral tactoids interacting with two synthetic pol
221 s clays, in particular Illite-a non-swelling clay mineral that naturally contains interlayer K(+) and
222 aining soluble reduced metals and expandable clay minerals that absorb cations, providing a capacity
223 ematic oscillations of various evaporite and clay minerals that can be linked to the variation of reg
224 ould greatly enhance production of pedogenic clay minerals (the "clay mineral factory"), leading to i
225 ic matter is mixed on a nanometer scale with clay minerals, the individual D/H ratios of the two H-be
226 espite the importance of Fe redox cycling in clay minerals, the mechanism and location of electron tr
227                Given the ubiquity of natural clay minerals, the most likely interaction of nanopartic
228 ffect on Cr(VI) reduction kinetics: for both clay minerals, the rate constant of Cr(VI) reduction var
229 many inter-crystalline pores are produced in clay minerals, this type of pores is not the most import
230 nect the synthesis of sauconite, a model for clay minerals, to prebiotic photochemistry.
231 rmination of clay-Fe(II/III) and U(IV/VI) in clay mineral-U suspensions such that advanced spectrosco
232  Cr(VI) by organic ligand in the presence of clay minerals under certain environmental conditions.
233                             The stability of clay minerals under such hydrous subduction environment
234 ing the redox properties of structural Fe in clay minerals using electrochemical approaches, however,
235  study, the retention mechanism of Fe(II) on clay minerals was investigated using macroscopic sorptio
236 uction on soil surrogates composed of HA and clay minerals was studied by use of a coated-wall flow r
237  processes between divalent Fe and Zn at the clay mineral-water interface.
238   Using experimental data on an iron-bearing clay mineral, we illustrate how mediated electrochemical
239                                              Clay minerals were co-located with P only to a lesser ex
240 d structural incorporation into double-layer clay minerals were likely responsible for greater retent
241                     Under anoxic conditions, clay minerals were shown to increase Cd retention by fav
242 owever, the correlations between C forms and clay minerals were weakened in the coarse-textured Calci
243 en shown using culture experiments with pure clay minerals, whereas recognition in nature remains dif
244 ity, and ion-exchange capacity properties of clay minerals, which constitute a major fraction of glob
245                 It is generally assumed that clay minerals, which contribute approximately two-thirds
246  fraction as U(VI) primarily adsorbed on 2:1 clay minerals, which is in line with X-ray Absorption Sp
247  by creating a hydrogel made from geological clay minerals, which provides an efficient confinement e
248 odels for an illite-smectite interstratified clay mineral with a ratio of 1:1 and a Reichweite parame
249        We discovered that the interaction of clay minerals with dissolved organic matter and a gamma-
250 mpact on Cd retention in the presence of two clay minerals with low Fe contents, a natural kaolinite
251 of organic monomers within the interlayer of clay minerals yields nanocomposites with novel material

 
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