Etude multi-échelle des interfaces minérales : exploration des interactions fluide-minéral-microorganismes du laboratoire au terrain

Past event
23 March 2018
11h
EOST, 1 rue Blessig, amphi 2

Séminaire du LHyGeS le vendredi 23 mars à 11h

Intervenant : Bastien Wild, Chercheur CDD CNRS au LHyGeS

Titre : "Etude multi-échelle des interfaces minérales : exploration des interactions fluide-minéral-microorganismes du laboratoire au terrain / Multiscale investigation of mineral interfaces: Exploring fluid-mineral-microorganisms interactions from the laboratory to the field".

Résumé :

Chemical weathering of silicate minerals is central to numerous environmental and societal challenges. This encompass the renewal of soil nutrient pools through sustainable pedogenesis, global atmospheric CO2 drawdown as well as industrial developments dealing with the durability of geothermal installations or cement infrastructures.

Laboratory-defined mineral dissolution rates and those observed in the field often differ by several orders of magnitude. Bridging the gap between them constitutes a long- standing problem in water-rock kinetics. This field/lab discrepancy was suggested to arise from both intrinsic (i.e., related to the microstructural evolution of mineral surfaces) and extrinsic (i.e., related to the composition of the reacting fluids) factors. The exact nature and the relative contributions of intrinsic and extrinsic factors still remain poorly understood.

In this seminar, I will present a stepwise approach to elucidate the respective impact of both intrinsic and extrinsic factors on feldspar weathering rates. Intrinsic factors were first investigated separately in the course of labradorite feldspar dissolution by combining focused ion beam-transmission electron microscopy (FIB-TEM) observations with vertical scanning interferometry (VSI) and aqueous chemistry analyses. This approach enabled to point out the effect on silicate weathering rates of both textural and structural evolutions of amorphous silica-rich surface layers (ASSLs) formed at the reacting fluid/solid interface.

To quantify the effect of intrinsic factors, a novel method of in situ probing of biogeochemical weathering rates in the field was tested at the Strengbach critical zone observatory (Aubure, France). Absolute mineral weathering rates derived from this method were compared with the output of reactive transport code for the corresponding experimental plot. Our results highlight the significant contribution of extrinsic factors to the field- laboratory discrepancy. Combining these data with Illumina MiSeq-based metagenomic analysis of bacterial and fungal community diversity revealed that subtle reciprocal relationships are established between microorganisms and mineral substrates within the mineralosphere.