The sequestration of silicon in soil clay-sized iron oxides may affect the terrestrial cycle of Si. Iron oxides indeed specifically adsorb aqueous monosilicic acid (H4SiO40), thereby influencing Si concentration in soil solution. Here we study the impact of H4SiO40 adsorption on the fractionation of Si isotopes in basaltic ash soils differing in weathering degree (from two weathering sequences, Cameroon), hence in clay and Fe-oxide contents, and evaluate the potential isotopic impact on dissolved Si in surrounding Cameroon rivers. Adsorption was measured in batch experiment series designed as function of time (0-72 h) and initial concentration (ic) of Si in solution (0.61-1.18 mM) at 20 degrees C, constant pH (5.5) and ionic strength (I mM). After various soil-solution contact times, the delta Si-30 vs. NBS28 compositions were determined in selected solutions by MC-ICP-MS (Nu Plasma) in medium resolution, operating in dry plasma with Mg doping with an average precision of +/-0.15 parts per thousand (+/-2 sigma(SEM)). The quantitative adsorption of H4SiO40 by soil Fe-oxides left a solution depleted in light Si isotopes, which confirms previous study on synthetic Fe-oxides. Measured against its initial composition (delta Si-30 = +0.02 +/- 0.07 parts per thousand (+/-2 sigma(SD))), the solutions were systematically enriched in Si-30 reaching maximum delta Si-30 values ranging between +0.16 parts per thousand and +0.95 parts per thousand after 72 h contact time. The enrichment of the solution in heavy isotopes increased with increasing values of three parameters: soil weathering degree, iron oxide content, and proportion of short-range ordered Fe-oxide. The Si-isotopic signature of the solution was partly influenced by Si release, possibly through mineral dissolution and Si desorption from oxide surfaces, depending on soil type, highlighting the complex pattern of natural soils. Surrounding Cameroon rivers displayed a mean Si-isotopic signature of +1.19 parts per thousand. Our data imply that in natural environments, H4SiO40 adsorption by soil clay-sized Fe-oxides at least partly impacts the Si-isotopic signature of the soil solution exported to water streams. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Opfergelt, S., de Bournonville, G., Cardinal, D., André, L., Delstanche, S., & Delvaux, B. (2009). Impact of soil weathering degree on silicon isotopic fractionation during adsorption onto iron oxides in basaltic ash soils, Cameroon. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 73(24), 7226-7240. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2009.09.003 (Original work published 2009)