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Dive into the research topics where Delphine Tisserand is active.

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Featured researches published by Delphine Tisserand.


Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2013

Origin, mobility, and temporal evolution of arsenic from a low-contamination catchment in Alpine crystalline rocks.

Eric Pili; Delphine Tisserand; Sarah Bureau

The reduction to 10 μg/l of the limit for arsenic in drinking water led many resource managers to deal with expensive treatments. In the very common case of arsenic levels close to the recommended maximum concentration, knowing the origin and temporal evolution of As has become of great importance. Here we present a case study from an alpine basin. Arsenic speciation, isotopic compositions of pyrite, sulfate and water, and concentrations of major and trace elements demonstrate a geogenic source for arsenic linked to the dissolution of pyrite. We provide new tools to further study As at low concentrations where many processes may be masked. The observed negative correlation between δ(34)SSO4 and [As] is interpreted as a Rayleigh-type sulfur-isotope fractionation during increasing pyrite dissolution. The observed positive correlation between δ(18)OSO4 and As(V)/As(III) could help to retrieve initial redox conditions. A 3-year long monitoring at high-resolution demonstrated that drought conditions enhance pyrite dissolution whose degradation products are scavenged by recharge water. An increase in As in groundwater may result from droughts due to enhanced oxygen entry in the unsaturated zone. The 2003 European heatwave had a major effect.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2018

Selenite uptake by Ca-Al LDH: a description of intercalated anion coordination geometries

Bin Ma; Alejandro Fernandez-Martinez; Sylvain Grangeon; Christophe Tournassat; Nathaniel Findling; Sergio Carrero; Delphine Tisserand; Sarah Bureau; Erik Elkaim; C. Marini; G. Aquilanti; Ayumi Koishi; Nicolas C.M. Marty; Laurent Charlet

Layered double hydroxides (LDHs) are anion exchangers with a strong potential to scavenge anionic contaminants in aquatic environments. Here, the uptake of selenite (SeO32-) by Ca-Al LDHs was investigated as a function of Se concentration. Thermodynamic modeling of batch sorption isotherms shows that the formation of SeO32--intercalated AFm (hydrated calcium aluminate monosubstituent) phase, AFm-SeO3, is the dominant mechanism controlling the retention of Se at medium loadings. AFm-Cl2 shows much stronger affinity and larger distribution ratio (Rd ∼ 17800 L kg-1) toward SeO32- than AFm-SO4 (Rd ∼ 705 L kg-1). At stoichiometric SeO32- loading for anion exchange, the newly formed AFm-SeO3 phase results in two basal spacing, i.e., 9.93 ± 0.06 Å and ∼11.03 ± 0.03 Å. Extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectra indicate that the intercalated SeO32- forms inner-sphere complexes with the Ca-Al-O layers. In situ X-ray diffraction (XRD) shows that basal spacing of Ca-Al LDHs have a remarkable linear relationship with the size of hydrated intercalated anions (i.e., Cl-, SO42-, MoO42-, and SeO32-). Contrary to AFm-SeO3 with inner-sphere SeO32- complexes in the interlayer, the phase with hydrogen-bonded inner-sphere complexed SeO32- is kinetically favored but thermodynamically unstable. This work offers new insights about the determination of intercalated anion coordination geometries via XRD analyses.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2017

Evidence of Multiple Sorption Modes in Layered Double Hydroxides Using Mo As Structural Probe

Bin Ma; Alejandro Fernandez-Martinez; Sylvain Grangeon; Christophe Tournassat; Nathaniel Findling; Francis Claret; Ayumi Koishi; Nicolas C.M. Marty; Delphine Tisserand; Sarah Bureau; Eduardo Salas-Colera; Erik Elkaim; Carlo Marini; Laurent Charlet

Layered double hydroxides (LDHs) have been considered as effective phases for the remediation of aquatic environments, to remove anionic contaminants mainly through anion exchange mechanisms. Here, a combination of batch isotherm experiments and X-ray techniques was used to examine molybdate (MoO42-) sorption mechanisms on CaAl LDHs with increasing loadings of molybdate. Advanced modeling of aqueous data shows that the sorption isotherm can be interpreted by three retention mechanisms, including two types of edge sites complexes, interlayer anion exchange, and CaMoO4 precipitation. Meanwhile, Mo geometry evolves from tetrahedral to octahedral on the edge, and back to tetrahedral coordination at higher Mo loadings, indicated by Mo K-edge X-ray absorption spectra. Moreover, an anion exchange process on both CaAl LDHs was followed by in situ time-resolved synchrotron-based X-ray diffraction, remarkably agreeing with the sorption isotherm. This detailed molecular view shows that different uptake mechanisms-edge sorption, interfacial dissolution-reprecipitation-are at play and control anion uptake under environmentally relevant conditions, which is contrast to the classical view of anion exchange as the primary retention mechanism. This work puts all these mechanisms in perspective, offering a new insight into the complex interplay of anion uptake mechanisms by LDH phases, by using changes in Mo geometry as powerful molecular-scale probe.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2018

XANES-based determination of redox potentials imposed by steel corrosion products in cement-based media

Bin Ma; Alejandro Fernandez-Martinez; Benoît Madé; Nathaniel Findling; Ekaterina Markelova; Eduardo Salas-Colera; Thierry G.G. Maffeis; Aled R. Lewis; Delphine Tisserand; Sarah Bureau; Laurent Charlet

The redox potential (Eh) in a cementitious nuclear waste repository is critical to the retardation behavior of redox-sensitive radionuclides (RNs), and largely controlled by embedded steel corrosion but hard to be determined experimentally. Here, we propose an innovative Eh determination method based on chemical/spectroscopic measurements. Oxidized nuclides (UVI, SeIV, MoVI, and SbV) were employed as species probes to detect the Eh values imposed by steel (Fe0) and steel corrosion products (magnetite/hematite, and magnetite/goethite couples) in cement pore water. Nuclides showed good sorption affinity, especially toward Fe0, in decreasing Kd order for U > Sb > Se > Mo under both N2 and H2 atmospheres. The reduced nuclide species were identified as UO2, U4O9, FeSe, FeSe2, Se0, Sb0, and Sb2O3, but no redox transformation occurred for Mo. Eh values were obtained by using the Nernst equation. Remarkably, their values fell in a small range centered around -456 mV at pH ∼ 13.5 for both Fe0 and Fe-oxyhydroxides couples. This Eh value appears to be controlled by the nanocrystalline Fe(OH)2/Fe(OH)3 or (Fe1- x,Ca x)(OH)2/Fe(OH)3 couple, whose presence was confirmed by pair distribution function analyses. This approach could pave the way for describing the Eh gradient in reinforced concrete where traditional Eh measurements are not feasible.


Chemical Geology | 2012

Unifying natural and laboratory chemical weathering with interfacial dissolution–reprecipitation: A study based on the nanometer-scale chemistry of fluid–silicate interfaces

Roland Hellmann; Richard Wirth; Damien Daval; Jean Paul Barnes; Jean Michel Penisson; Delphine Tisserand; Thierry Epicier; Brigitte Florin; Richard L. Hervig


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2006

Dissolution kinetics as a function of the Gibbs free energy of reaction: An experimental study based on albite feldspar

Roland Hellmann; Delphine Tisserand


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2007

Electron transfer at the mineral/water interface: Selenium reduction by ferrous iron sorbed on clay

Laurent Charlet; A.C. Scheinost; C. Tournassat; Jean Marc Greneche; A. Gehin; A. Fernández-Martı´nez; S. Coudert; Delphine Tisserand; J. Brendle


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Enhanced deformation of limestone and sandstone in the presence of high fluids

Y. Le Guen; François Renard; Roland Hellmann; E. Brosse; M. Collombet; Delphine Tisserand; Jean-Pierre Gratier


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2004

The titration of clay minerals: I. Discontinuous backtitration technique combined with CEC measurements

Christophe Tournassat; Jean Marc Greneche; Delphine Tisserand; Laurent Charlet


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2005

Natural speciation of Mn, Ni, and Zn at the micrometer scale in a clayey paddy soil using X-ray fluorescence, absorption, and diffraction

Alain Manceau; Caterina Tommaseo; Sophie Rihs; Nicolas Geoffroy; D. Chateigner; Michel L. Schlegel; Delphine Tisserand; Matthew A. Marcus; Nobumichi Tamura; Zueng-Sang Chen

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Damien Daval

University of Strasbourg

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Alejandro Fernandez-Martinez

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Sarah Bureau

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean Marc Greneche

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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