Title: SULFUR CYCLE
1SULFUR CYCLE
- Sulfur reservoirs
- Driving forces for sulfur transformation
- Sulfur in the atmosphere
- Sulfur in rivers
- Sulfur in the ocean
- Global sulfur cycle
- Sulfur budget for the ocean
- Pyrite formation in sediments
- Diagenetic modelling
2Global Sulfur Cycle
- Valence states 6 (SO42-) to -2 (sulfides)
- Original pool - pyrite FeS2
- Reservoirs,1018 g S
- Deep oceanic rocks 2375 820
- Sediments 78001700
- Freshwater 0.0030.002
- Ice 0.0060.002
- Atmosphere 3.6
- Sea 128055
- Organic 5.62x 10-3
3Driving Forces Microbial Transformation
- Anaerobic conditions
- sulfate reduction 2H SO42-
2(CH2O)-gt2CO2H2S2H2O (Desulfovibrio sp. or
Desulfotomaculum sp.)) - bacteria produce a variety of gases hydrogen
sulfide (H2S), dimethyl-sulfide (CH3)2S, carboxyl
sulfide COS - H2S reacts with Fe2 to precipitate FeS, which
can be converted to pyrite FeS2 - FeS H2S gt FeS2 2H 2e-
- H2S diffuses though zone of F3
- 2Fe(OH)3 3H2S 2H gt FeS2 6H2O Fe2
- sulfur-based photosynthesis (thought to be one of
first forms of photosynthesis on the Earth) - Plant uptake
- assimilatory SO42- reduction and incorporation
of carbon-bounded sulfur into the amino acids
cysteine and methionine. - Aerobic conditions
- reduced sulfur compounds oxidized by microbes,
oxidation usually coupled to reduction of CO2 in
relations of S-based chemosynthesis.
4Sulfur in the Atmosphere
- Gaseous component
- no sulfur gas is a long-lived or major
constituent of the atmosphere, oxidation of SO42-
? short residence time, all expressions in g S
- Aerosols
- particles lt 1um are held a loft by Brownian
motion - long transport
- sources volcanic eruptions, ocean, water
evaporates from bubbles, the salt crystallizes
to form sea-salt aerosols
5Sources of Sulfur in the Atmosphere
Eriksson (1960) - SO42- deposition on land from
ocean 4x1012 g S , Jung (1960) - SO42- in
rainfall in land 73x1012 g S, ? other sources as
sea.
- Volcanic eruptions
- average over many years 12-30x1012 g S
- e.g. Tambora (Indonesia) in 1815, 1816 - year
without summer in England, USA, Canada, 50x1012
g S
- Biogenic gases
- H2S, dimethyl-sulfide (CH3)2S, carbonyl sulfide
COS
- Anthropogenic emissions
- without human effects, net transport through the
atmosphere carries S from sea to land
6Sulfur in Rivers
- Natural river load
- from weathering of pyrite4FeS215O28H2O?
2Fe2O38H2SO4 - and gypsum, rainfall
- Human activities affect the transport of S in
rivers - 28 of the current content of S in rivers is
derived from air pollution, mining, erosion, and
the other human activities - the current transport is supposed to be about
double that of pre-industrial conditions
7Marine sulfur cycle
- Ocean is large source of aerosols (sea salts)
that contains SO42-. - Most of the flux is re-deposited in the ocean in
precipitation and dry-fall - Dimethyl-sulfid (CH3)2S or DMS is the major
biogenic gases emitted from sea - annual flux is about 15
- mean residence time about 1-2 days - most of S
from DMS is also re-deposited in the ocean - The net transport of S from sea to land is about
20x1012 g S/yr. Ocean receives a net input of S.
8Global Sulfur Cycle
all values in 10 12 g S/yr
Rivers
72
Natural weathering and erosion
From Schlesinger W.H. 1997
9Sulfur budget for the ocean
all values in 1012 g S/yr
Other reduced gases
SO2
DMS
Precipitation dry fall
11
40
lt6
247
Sea salt
Rivers
144
131
12 x 10 20 g
Hydrothermal vents
Pyrite
96
39
From Schlesinger W.H. 1997
10Marine sulfur cycle
- Content 12x1020 g S/ yr., residence time gt 3 000
000 years. - Major marine sinks metallic sulfides
precipitated at hydro-thermal vents, biogenic
pyrites, the formation of organic sulfur.
11Dimethylsulfid (CH3)2S or DMS
DMS is the major one of biogenic gases emitted
from sea
- mean residence time is about 1-2 days - most of S
from DMS is also re-deposited in the ocean
- is produces during decom-position of
dimethyl-sulfonpropionate (DMSP) from dying
phytoplankton
- only small fraction lost into the atmosphere
12DMS and climate
- oxidation of DMS to sulfate aerosols increases
the abundance of cloud condensation nuclei ? to
greater cloudiness
- layer of sulfate aerosols (known as Junge layer)
is about 20-25 km altitude, source SO2 and
carbonyl sulfate COS
- clouds over sea reflect incoming sunlight ?
global cooling
- production of DMS - net primary production.
- if higher NPP is associated with warmer sea
surface, then DMS-flux would have negative
feedback on global warming
13Pyrite Formation in Sediments
Sulfate reduction SO42- 2(CH2O)-gt2HCO3- H2S
Two steps reaction
- Reaction H2S with Fe2 or reactive Fe-mineral
- 4Fe2O39H2S -gt8FeSSO42-8H2O2H
- Reaction of iron sulfide with elemental sulfur
- FeS S0 -gt FeS2
incomplete oxidation of H2S or FeS by O2, NO3-,
MnO2 or FeOOH
Recently
- In strictly anoxic sediments FeSH2S -gtFeS2 H2
- In salt sediments Fe2 S0 -gtFeS2
From Schultze/Zabel 2000
14Pyrite Formation in Sediments(after Berner 1972)
ORGANIC MATTER
SO42-
BACTERIA
Fe MINERALS
H2S
BACTERIA
BACTERIA
FeS
S0
FeS2
PYRITE
15SULFUR IN LAKES
Plants
Bacteria
Fe 2
FeS