The Science

As anyone who hangs around marinas or bridges knows, iron rusts and that rust is relentless. It’s also a major component in our soil that affects the availability of nutrients and the movement of heavy metal contaminants, such as lead. Now, scientists have visualized mineral iron’s reactivity when deprived of oxygen, such as below the soil surface. Using tracer ions, they followed the chemical reactions to create 3D “atomic maps.” The maps show the rearrangement of iron atoms on a surface. In analyzing the maps, researchers revealed a dynamic iron cycle. Iron continually moves on and off mineral surfaces, seeking defects and going deeper into the crystals.

The Impact

Knowing more about how iron reacts could hold clues for better materials and lead to advances in soil remediation. The results confirm that reactions with iron in soils and steel corrosion products are more dynamic than typically thought. The study illustrates how rust persists on metal pipes under changing chemical conditions, enabling it to continually corrode and deteriorate over time.

Summary

Both underneath our feet and in the skyscrapers towering above, iron is constantly reacting. In the soil, these reactions can affect both nutrient and heavy metal availability. In buildings and bridges, these reactions lead to rust. The exact nature of the reactions was not well understood, in part because of the challenges of imaging the atomic-scale interactions that happen on iron surfaces. For years, scientists at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory have focused on creating a 3D map of the atomic activities happening on an iron surface. Using a rare imaging technique, atom probe tomography, they were finally able to map atomic exchanges between goethite, a major component of rust, and iron from its surrounding solution. The results let the team determine how far tracer atoms, tracked by atom probe tomography, dug into the surface, a key part of corrosion reactions. In just the earliest stages, the atoms had dug in about 3.5 nanometers, far deeper than previously thought. They also found these atoms concentrated in hot spots where defects resided. The team’s results offer insights into a broad range of processes, from the formation of rust to decontamination of soil where goethite can bind heavy metals.

Funding

This research was supported by the Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Science (BES), Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences Division, Geosciences program. D.K.S. acknowledges support from the DOE SC BES Materials Sciences and Engineering Division for assisting with the atom probe tomography experimental design, data interpretation, and manuscript preparation. Research was done in the Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, a national scientific user facility sponsored by DOE SC’s Biological and Environmental Research.

Publications

S.D. Taylor, J. Liu, X. Zhang, B.W. Arey, L. Kovarik, D.K. Schreiber, D.E. Perea, and K.M. Rosso, “Visualizing the iron atom exchange front in the Fe(II)-catalyzed recrystallization of goethite by atom probe tomography.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 116, 2866 (2019). [DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1816620116]