Fabien Maillot
Washington University in St. Louis
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Fabien Maillot.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2013
Areej Adra; Guillaume Morin; Georges Ona-Nguema; Nicolas Menguy; Fabien Maillot; Corinne Casiot; Odile Bruneel; Sophie Lebrun; Farid Juillot; Jessica Brest
Ferrihydrite (Fh) is a nanocrystalline ferric oxyhydroxide involved in the retention of pollutants in natural systems and in water-treatment processes. The status and properties of major chemical impurities in natural Fh is however still scarcely documented. Here we investigated the structure of aluminum-rich Fh, and their role in arsenic scavenging in river-bed sediments from a circumneutral river (pH 6-7) impacted by an arsenic-rich acid mine drainage (AMD). Extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectroscopy at the Fe K-edge shows that Fh is the predominant mineral phase forming after neutralization of the AMD, in association with minor amount of schwertmannite transported from the AMD. TEM-EDXS elemental mapping and SEM-EDXS analyses combined with EXAFS analysis indicates that Al(3+) substitutes for Fe(3+) ions into the Fh structure in the natural sediment samples, with local aluminum concentration within the 25-30 ± 10 mol %Al range. Synthetic aluminous Fh prepared in the present study are found to be less Al-substituted (14-20 ± 5 mol %Al). Finally, EXAFS analysis at the arsenic K-edge indicates that As(V) form similar inner-sphere surface complexes on the natural and synthetic Al-substituted Fh studied. Our results provide direct evidence for the scavenging of arsenic by natural Al-Fh, which emphasize the possible implication of such material for scavenging pollutants in natural or engineered systems.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2012
Cindy Rianti Priadi; Pierre Le Pape; Guillaume Morin; Sophie Ayrault; Fabien Maillot; Farid Juillot; Rebecca Hochreutener; Isabelle Llorens; Denis Testemale; Olivier Proux; Gordon E. Brown
Zinc is one of the most widespread trace metals (TMs) in Earth surface environments and is the most concentrated TM in the downstream section of the Seine River (France) due to significant anthropogenic input from the Paris conurbation. In order to better identify the sources and cycling processes of Zn in this River basin, we investigated seasonal and spatial variations of Zn speciation in suspended particulate matter (SPM) in the oxic water column of the Seine River from upstream to downstream of Paris using synchrotron-based extend X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) spectroscopy at the Zn K-edge. First-neighbor contributions to the EXAFS were analyzed in SPM samples, dried and stored under a dry nitrogen atmosphere or under an ambient oxygenated atmosphere. We found a sulfur first coordination environment around Zn (in the form of amorphous zinc sulfide) in the raw SPM samples stored under dry nitrogen vs an oxygen first coordination environment around Zn in the samples stored in an oxygenated atmosphere. These findings are supported by scanning electron microscopy and energy dispersive X-ray spectrometry observations. Linear combination fitting of the EXAFS data for SPM samples, using a large set of EXAFS spectra of Zn model compounds, indicates dramatic changes in the Zn speciation from upstream to downstream of Paris, with amorphous ZnS particles becoming dominant dowstream. In contrast, Zn species associated with calcite (either adsorbed or incorporated in the structure) are dominant upstream. Other Zn species representing about half of the Zn pool in the SPM consist of Zn-sorbed on iron oxyhydroxides (ferrihydrite and goethite) and, to a lesser extent, Zn-Al layered double hydroxides, Zn incorporated in dioctahedral layers of clay minerals and Zn sorbed to amorphous silica. Our results highlight the importance of preserving the oxidation state in TM speciation studies when sampling suspended matter, even in an oxic water column.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2016
Vrajesh S. Mehta; Fabien Maillot; Zheming Wang; Jeffrey G. Catalano; Daniel E. Giammar
Phosphate addition to subsurface environments contaminated with uranium can be used as an in situ remediation approach. Batch experiments were conducted to evaluate the dependence of the extent and mechanism of uranium uptake on the pathway for reaction with calcium phosphates. At pH 4.0 and 6.0 uranium uptake from solution occurred via autunite (Ca(UO2)2(PO4)2) precipitation irrespective of the starting forms of calcium and phosphate. At pH 7.5, a condition at which calcium phosphate solids could form, the uptake mechanism depended on the nature of the calcium and phosphate as determined by X-ray absorption spectroscopy and laser-induced fluorescence spectroscopy. When dissolved uranium, calcium, and phosphate were added simultaneously, uranium was structurally incorporated into a newly formed amorphous calcium phosphate solid. Adsorption was the dominant removal mechanism for uranium contacted with preformed amorphous calcium phosphate solids. When U(VI) was added to a suspension containing amorphous calcium phosphate solids as well as dissolved calcium and phosphate, then removal occurred through precipitation (57 ± 4%) of autunite and adsorption (43 ± 4%) onto calcium phosphate. Dissolved uranium, calcium, and phosphate concentrations with saturation index calculations helped identify removal mechanisms and determine thermodynamically favorable solid phases.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2014
Delphine Guerbois; Georges Ona-Nguema; Guillaume Morin; Mustapha Abdelmoula; Anniet M. Laverman; Jean-Marie Mouchel; Kevin Barthelemy; Fabien Maillot; Jessica Brest
The present study investigates for the first time the reduction of nitrite by biogenic hydroxycarbonate green rusts, bio-GR(CO3), produced from the bioreduction of ferric oxyhydroxycarbonate (Fohc), a poorly crystalline solid phase, and of lepidocrocite, a well-crystallized Fe(III)-oxyhydroxide mineral. Results show a fast Fe(II) production from Fohc, which leads to the precipitation of bio-GR(CO3) particles that were roughly 2-fold smaller (2.3 ± 0.4 μm) than those obtained from the bioreduction of lepidocrocite (5.0 ± 0.4 μm). The study reveals that both bio-GR(CO3) are capable of reducing nitrite ions into gaseous nitrogen species such as NO, N2O, or N2 without ammonium production at neutral initial pH and that nitrite reduction proceeded to a larger extent with smaller particles than with larger ones. On the basis of the identification of intermediates and end-reaction products using X-ray diffraction and X-ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) spectroscopy at the Fe K-edge, our study shows the formation of hydroxy-nitrite green rust, GR(NO2), a new type of green rust 1, and suggests that the reduction of nitrite by biogenic GR(CO3) involves both external and internal reaction sites and that such a mechanism could explain the higher reactivity of green rust with respect to nitrite, compared to other mineral substrates possessing only external reactive sites.
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2011
Fabien Maillot; Guillaume Morin; Yuheng Wang; Dominique Bonnin; Philippe Ildefonse; Corinne Chanéac; Georges Calas
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2013
Fabien Maillot; Guillaume Morin; Farid Juillot; Odile Bruneel; Corinne Casiot; Georges Ona-Nguema; Yuheng Wang; Sophie Lebrun; Emmanuel Aubry; Gilberto Vlaic; Gordon E. Brown
Chemical Geology | 2014
Vrajesh S. Mehta; Fabien Maillot; Zheming Wang; Jeffrey G. Catalano; Daniel E. Giammar
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2016
Lyndsay D. Troyer; Fabien Maillot; Zheming Wang; Zimeng Wang; Vrajesh S. Mehta; Daniel E. Giammar; Jeffrey G. Catalano
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2012
Yohan Guyodo; Philippe Sainctavit; Marie Anne Arrio; Claire Carvallo; R. Lee Penn; Jasmine Erbs; Brady S. Forsberg; Guillaume Morin; Fabien Maillot; Pierre Bonville; F. Wilhelm; A. Rogalev
Water Research | 2015
Vrajesh S. Mehta; Fabien Maillot; Zheming Wang; Jeffrey G. Catalano; Daniel E. Giammar