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The removal of lead from commercialized perovskite-oxide-based piezoceramics has been a recent major topic in materials research owing to legislation in many countries. In this regard, Sn(II)-perovskite oxides have garnered keen interest due to their predicted large spontaneous electric polarizations and isoelectronic nature for substitution of Pb(II) cations. However, they have not been considered synthesizable owing to their high metastability. Herein, the perovskite lead hafnate, i.e., PbHfO3 in space group Pbam, is shown to react with SnClF at a low temperature of 300 °C, and resulting in the first complete Sn(II)-for-Pb(II) substitution, i.e. SnHfO3 . During this topotactic transformation, a high purity and crystallinity is conserved with Pbam symmetry, as confirmed by X-ray and electron diffraction, elemental analysis, and 119 Sn Mössbauer spectroscopy. In situ diffraction shows SnHfO3 also possesses reversible phase transformations and is potentially polar between ≈130-200 °C. This so-called 'de-leadification' is thus shown to represent a highly useful strategy to fully remove lead from perovskite-oxide-based piezoceramics and opening the door to new explorations of polar and antipolar Sn(II)-oxide materials.
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Phosphorus is essential to plant growth and agricultural crop yields, yet the challenges associated with phosphorus fertilization in agriculture, such as aquatic runoff pollution and poor phosphorus bioavailability, are increasingly difficult to manage. Comprehensively understanding the dynamics of phosphorus uptake and signaling mechanisms will inform the development of strategies to address these issues. This review describes regulatory mechanisms used by specific tissues in the root apical meristem to sense and take up phosphate from the rhizosphere. The major regulatory mechanisms and related hormone crosstalk underpinning phosphate starvation responses, cellular phosphate homeostasis, and plant adaptations to phosphate starvation are also discussed, along with an overview of the major mechanism of plant systemic phosphate starvation responses. Finally, this review discusses recent promising genetic engineering strategies for improving crop phosphorus use and computational approaches that may help further design strategies for improved plant phosphate acquisition. The mechanisms and approaches presented include a wide variety of species including not only Arabidopsis but also crop species such as Oryza sativa (rice), Glycine max (soybean), and Triticum aestivum (wheat) to address both general and species-specific mechanisms and strategies. The aspects of phosphorus deficiency responses and recently employed strategies of improving phosphate acquisition that are detailed in this review may provide insights into the mechanisms or phenotypes that may be targeted in efforts to improve crop phosphorus content and plant growth in low phosphorus soils.
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Arabidopsis , Oryza , Fosfatos , Fósforo , Homeostasis , Transporte Biológico , Productos Agrícolas , Triticum/genética , Oryza/genética , Raíces de Plantas/genéticaRESUMEN
Hf0.5Zr0.5O2(HZO) thin films are promising candidates for non-volatile memory and other related applications due to their demonstrated ferroelectricity at the nanoscale and compatibility with Si processing. However, one reason that HZO has not been fully scaled into industrial applications is due to its deleterious wake-up and fatigue behavior which leads to an inconsistent remanent polarization during cycling. In this study, we explore an interfacial engineering strategy in which we insert 1 nm Al2O3interlayers at either the top or bottom HZO/TiN interface of sequentially deposited metal-ferroelectric-metal capacitors. By inserting an interfacial layer while limiting exposure to the ambient environment, we successfully introduce a protective passivating layer of Al2O3that provides excess oxygen to mitigate vacancy formation at the interface. We report that TiN/HZO/TiN capacitors with a 1 nm Al2O3at the top interface demonstrate a higher remanent polarization (2Prâ¼ 42µC cm-2) and endurance limit beyond 108cycles at a cycling field amplitude of 3.5 MV cm-1. We use time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry, energy dispersive spectroscopy, and grazing incidence x-ray diffraction to elucidate the origin of enhanced endurance and leakage properties in capacitors with an inserted 1 nm Al2O3layer. We demonstrate that the use of Al2O3as a passivating dielectric, coupled with sequential ALD fabrication, is an effective means of interfacial engineering and enhances the performance of ferroelectric HZO devices.
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Recently, many new, complex, functional oxides have been discovered with the surprising use of topotactic ion-exchange reactions on close-packed structures, such as found for wurtzite, rutile, perovskite, and other structure types. Despite a lack of apparent cation-diffusion pathways in these structure types, synthetic low-temperature transformations are possible with the interdiffusion and exchange of functional cations possessing ns2 stereoactive lone pairs (e. g., Sn(II)) or unpaired ndx electrons (e. g., Co(II)), targeting new and favorable modulations of their electronic, magnetic, or catalytic properties. This enables a synergistic blending of new functionality to an underlying three-dimensional connectivity, i. e., [-M-O-M-O-]n , that is maintained during the transformation. In many cases, this tactic represents the only known pathway to prepare thermodynamically unstable solids that otherwise would commonly decompose by phase segregation, such as that recently applied to the discovery of many new small bandgap semiconductors.
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Ferroelectric random-access memory (FRAM) based on conventional ferroelectric materials is a non-volatile memory with fast read/write operations, high endurance, and 10 years of data retention time. However, it suffers from destructive read-out operation and lack of CMOS compatibility. HfO2-based ferroelectric tunnel junctions (FTJ) may compensate for the shortcomings of FRAM by its CMOS compatibility, fast operation speed, and non-destructive readout operation. In this study, we investigate the effect of ferroelectric and interface film thickness on the tunneling electroresistance or ON/OFF current ratio of the Hf0.5Zr0.5O2/Al2O3based FTJ device. Integrating a thick ferroelectric layer (i.e. 12 nm Hf0.5Zr0.5O2) with a thin interface layer (i.e. 1 nm Al2O3) resulted in an ON/OFF current ratio of 78. Furthermore, to elucidate the relationship between ON/OFF current ratio and interfacial properties, the Hf0.5Zr0.5O2-Al2O3films and Ge-Al2O3interfaces are examined via time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry depth profiling mode. A bilayer oxide heterostructure (Hf0.5Zr0.5O2/Al2O3) is deposited by atomic layer deposition (ALD) on the Ge substrate. The ON/OFF current ratio is enhanced by an order of magnitude when the Hf0.5Zr0.5O2film deposition mode is changed from exposure (H2O) ALD to sequential plasma (sequential O2-H2) ALD. Moreover, the interfacial engineering approach based on thein situALD H2-plasma surface pre-treatment of Ge increases the ON/OFF current ratio from 9 to 38 by reducing the interfacial trap density state at the Ge-Al2O3interface and producing Al2O3with fewer oxygen vacancies as compared to the wet etch (HF + H2O rinse) treatment of the Ge substrate. This study provides evidence of strong coupling between Hf0.5Zr0.5O2and Al2O3films in controlling the ON/OFF current ratio of the FTJ.
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We established a murine model of multiwall carbon nanotube (MWCNT)-elicited chronic granulomatous disease that bears similarities to human sarcoidosis pathology, including alveolar macrophage deficiency of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ). Because lymphocyte reactivity to mycobacterial antigens has been reported in sarcoidosis, we hypothesized that addition of mycobacterial ESAT-6 (early secreted antigenic target protein 6) to MWCNT might exacerbate pulmonary granulomatous pathology. MWCNTs with or without ESAT-6 peptide 14 were instilled by the oropharyngeal route into macrophage-specific PPARγ-knockout (KO) or wild-type mice. Control animals received PBS or ESAT-6. Lung tissues, BAL cells, and BAL fluid were evaluated 60 days after instillation. PPARγ-KO mice receiving MWCNT + ESAT-6 had increased granulomas and significantly elevated fibrosis (trichrome staining) compared with wild-type mice or PPARγ-KO mice that received only MWCNT. Immunostaining of lung tissues revealed elevated fibronectin and Siglec F expression on CD11c+ infiltrating alveolar macrophages in the presence of MWCNT + ESAT-6 compared with MWCNT alone. Analyses of BAL fluid proteins indicated increased levels of transforming growth factor (TGF)-ß and the TGF-ß pathway mediator IL-13 in PPARγ-KO mice that received MWCNT + ESAT-6 compared with wild-type or PPARγ-KO mice that received MWCNT. Similarly, mRNA levels of matrix metalloproteinase 9, another requisite factor for TGF-ß production, was elevated in PPARγ-KO mice by MWCNT + ESAT-6. Analysis of ESAT-6 in lung tissues by mass spectrometry revealed ESAT-6 retention in lung tissues of PPARγ-KO but not wild-type mice. These data indicate that PPARγ deficiency promotes pulmonary ESAT-6 retention, exacerbates macrophage responses to MWCNT + ESAT-6, and intensifies pulmonary fibrosis. The present findings suggest that the model may facilitate understanding of the effects of environmental factors on sarcoidosis-associated pulmonary fibrosis.
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Antígenos Bacterianos/farmacología , Proteínas Bacterianas/farmacología , Macrófagos Alveolares/metabolismo , PPAR gamma/deficiencia , Fibrosis Pulmonar/microbiología , Sarcoidosis Pulmonar/microbiología , Animales , Lavado Broncoalveolar , Líquido del Lavado Bronquioalveolar , Antígenos CD11/metabolismo , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Fibronectinas/metabolismo , Fibrosis/metabolismo , Inflamación , Pulmón/patología , Macrófagos/metabolismo , Espectrometría de Masas , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos C57BL , Ratones Noqueados , Nanotubos de Carbono/química , PPAR gamma/genética , Fibrosis Pulmonar/genética , Sarcoidosis Pulmonar/patologíaRESUMEN
Recently simulation groups have reported the lanthanide series elements as the dopants that have the strongest effect on the stabilization of the ferroelectric non-centrosymmetric orthorhombic phase in hafnium oxide. This finding confirms experimental results for lanthanum and gadolinium showing the highest remanent polarization values of all hafnia-based ferroelectric films until now. However, no comprehensive overview that links structural properties to the electrical performance of the films in detail is available for lanthanide-doped hafnia. La:HfO2 appears to be a material with a broad window of process parameters, and accordingly, by optimization of the La content in the layer, it is possible to improve the performance of the material significantly. Variations of the La concentration leads to changes in the crystallographic structure in the bulk of the films and at the interfaces to the electrode materials, which impacts the spontaneous polarization, internal bias fields, and with this the field cycling behavior of the capacitor structure. Characterization results are compared to other dopants like Si, Al, and Gd to validate the advantages of the material in applications such as semiconductor memory devices.
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The reversible intercalation of multivalent cations, especially Mg2+, into a solid-state electrode is an attractive mechanism for next-generation energy storage devices. These reactions typically exhibit poor kinetics due to a high activation energy for interfacial charge-transfer and slow solid-state diffusion. Interlayer water in V2O5 and MnO2 has been shown to improve Mg2+ intercalation kinetics in nonaqueous electrolytes. Here, the effect of structural water on Mg2+ intercalation in nonaqueous electrolytes is examined in crystalline WO3 and the related hydrated and layered WO3·nH2O (n = 1, 2). Using thin film electrodes, cyclic voltammetry, Raman spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, and electron microscopy, the energy storage in these materials is determined to involve reversible Mg2+ intercalation. It is found that the anhydrous WO3 can intercalate up to â¼0.3 Mg2+ (75 mAh g-1) and can maintain the monoclinic structure for at least 50 cycles at a cyclic voltammetry sweep rate of 0.1 mV s-1. The kinetics of Mg2+ storage in WO3 are limited by solid-state diffusion, which is similar to its behavior in a Li+ electrolyte. On the other hand, the maximum capacity for Mg2+ storage in WO3·nH2O is approximately half that of WO3 (35 mAh g-1). However, the kinetics of both Mg2+ and Li+ storage in WO3·nH2O are primarily limited by the interface and are thus pseudocapacitive. The stability of the structural water in WO3·nH2O varies: the interlayer water of WO3·2H2O is removed upon exposure to a nonaqueous electrolyte, while the water directly coordinated to W is stable during electrochemical cycling. These results demonstrate that tungsten oxides are potential candidates for Mg2+ cathodes, that in these materials structural water can lead to improved Mg2+ kinetics at the expense of capacity, and that the type of structural water affects stability.
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Titanium dioxide (TiO2) with exposed (001) facets (TiO2(001)) has attractive photocatalytic properties. However, the high recombination rate of the photo-excited charge carriers on this surface often limits its application. Here, we report that a few-layered 1T-MoS2 coating on TiO2(001) nanosheets (abbreviated as MST) can be a promising candidate that overcomes some of the challenges of TiO2(001). Computational and experimental results demonstrate that MST as a photocatalyst exhibits a significantly low-charge recombination rate as well as excellent long-term durability. The synthesized MST 2D nanocomposites show a 31.9% increase in photocatalytic activity for hydrogen (H2) production relative to the counterpart TiO2(001). MST offers a new route for further improvement of the photocatalytic activity of TiO2 with exposed high energy facets.
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A centrosymmetric stress cannot induce a polar response in centric materials; piezoelectricity is, for example, possible only in non-centrosymmetric structures. An exception is metamaterials with shape asymmetry, which may be polarized by stress even when the material is centric. In this case the mechanism is flexoelectricity, which relates polarization to a strain gradient. The flexoelectric response scales inversely with size, thus a large effect is expected in nanoscale materials. Recent experiments in polycrystalline, centrosymmetric perovskites (for example, (Ba, Sr)TiO3) have indicated values of flexoelectric coefficients that are orders of magnitude higher than theoretically predicted, promising practical applications based on bulk materials. We show that materials with unexpectedly large flexoelectric response exhibit breaking of the macroscopic centric symmetry through inhomogeneity induced by the high-temperature processing. The emerging electro-mechanical coupling is significant and may help to resolve the controversy surrounding the large apparent flexoelectric coefficients in this class of materials.
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Here, we report reproducible and accurate measurement of crystallographic parameters using scanning transmission electron microscopy. This is made possible by removing drift and residual scan distortion. We demonstrate real-space lattice parameter measurements with <0.1% error for complex-layered chalcogenides Bi2Te3, Bi2Se3, and a Bi2Te2.7Se0.3 nanostructured alloy. Pairing the technique with atomic resolution spectroscopy, we connect local structure with chemistry and bonding. Combining these results with density functional theory, we show that the incorporation of Se into Bi2Te3 causes charge redistribution that anomalously increases the van der Waals gap between building blocks of the layered structure. The results show that atomic resolution imaging with electrons can accurately and robustly quantify crystallography at the nanoscale.
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Cultural eutrophication from excessive human-related nutrient (phosphorus, P, and nitrogen, N) inputs is a major concern for water quality. Because P historically was regarded as the critical nutrient in controlling noxious algal/plant growth, P became the focus of "capturing" techniques, with emphasis on removal performance rather than environmental impacts. Here, we synthesize a literature review of known environmental effects linked to use of metal-cation-based P-capturing materials under eutrophic conditions in freshwaters. P-capturing materials with functional cations based on aluminum (Al), calcium (Ca), iron (Fe), lanthanum (La), and magnesium (Mg) were reviewed in terms of their ecotoxicity, persistence, and bioaccumulation-standard criteria used to evaluate environmental risks of chemical substances. We found very few published studies on environmental impacts of metal-cation-based P-capturing materials under eutrophic conditions. Available reports indicated that environmental effects vary depending on the selected material, dose, target organism(s), and experimental conditions. The Al-based materials had the potential to negatively impact various biota; several Fe-based materials caused various levels of toxicity in a limited group of aquatic organisms; La-based materials can bioaccumulate and some were linked to various harmful effects on biota; and Mg-based materials also adversely affected various organisms. The limited number of published studies underscores the need for further research to characterize the environmental impacts of these materials. Results can be used to guide future work and can assist resource managers in sustainable management strategies. Among various research needs, future assessments should assess the impacts of chronic exposures on sensitive species under realistic field conditions in eutrophic waters.
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Cationes , Metales , Fósforo , Contaminantes Químicos del Agua , Fósforo/análisis , Fósforo/química , Metales/análisis , Contaminantes Químicos del Agua/análisis , Eutrofización , Agua Dulce/química , Monitoreo del AmbienteRESUMEN
In ferroic materials, the dielectric, piezoelectric, magnetic, and elastic coefficients are significantly affected by the motion of domain walls. This motion can be described as the propagation of a wall across various types and strengths of pinning centers that collectively constitute a force profile or energetic landscape. Biased domain structures and asymmetric energy landscapes can be created through application of high fields (such as during electrical poling), and the material behavior in such states is often highly asymmetric. In some cases, this behavior can be considered as the electric analogue to the Bauschinger effect. The present Letter uses time-resolved, high-energy x-ray Bragg scattering to probe this asymmetry and the associated deaging effect in the ferroelectric morphotropic phase boundary composition 0.36BiScO3 - 0.64PbTiO3.
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Sn(ii)-based perovskite oxides, being the subject of longstanding theoretical interest for the past two decades, have been synthesized for the first time in the form of nano eggshell particle morphologies. All past reported synthetic attempts have been unsuccessful owing to their metastable nature, i.e., by their thermodynamic instability towards decomposition to their constituent oxides. A new approach was discovered that finally provides an effective solution to surmounting this intractable synthetic barrier and which can be the key to unlocking the door to many other predicted metastable oxides. A low-melting KSn2Cl5 salt was utilized to achieve a soft topotactic exchange of Sn(ii) cations into a Ba-containing perovskite, i.e., BaHfO3 with particle sizes of â¼350 nm, at a low reaction temperature of 200 °C. The resulting particles exhibit nanoshell-over-nanoshell morphologies, i.e., with SnHfO3 forming as â¼20 nm thick shells over the surfaces of the BaHfO3 eggshell particles. Formation of the metastable SnHfO3 is found to be thermodynamically driven by the co-production of the highly stable BaCl2 and KCl side products. Despite this, total energy calculations show that Sn(ii) distorts from the A-site asymmetrically and randomly and the interdiffusion has a negligible impact on the energy of the system (i.e., layered vs. solid solution). Additionally, nano eggshell particle morphologies of BaHfO3 were found to yield highly pure SnHfO3 for the first time, thus circumventing the intrinsic ion-diffusion limits occurring at this low reaction temperature. In summary, these results demonstrate that the metastability of many theoretically predicted Sn(ii)-perovskites can be overcome by leveraging the high cohesive energies of the reactants, the exothermic formation of a stable salt side product, and a shortened diffusion pathway for the Sn(ii) cations.
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Removing phosphorus (P) from water and wastewater is essential for preventing eutrophication and protecting environmental quality. Lanthanum [La(III)]-containing materials can effectively and selectively remove orthophosphate (PO4) from aqueous systems, but there remains a need to better understand the underlying mechanism of PO4 removal. Our objectives were to 1) identify the mechanism of PO4 removal by La-containing materials and 2) evaluate the ability of a new material, La2(CO3)3(s), to remove PO4 from different aqueous matrices, including municipal wastewater. We determined the dominant mechanism of PO4 removal by comparing geochemical simulations with equilibrium data from batch experiments and analyzing reaction products by X-ray diffraction and scanning transmission electron microscopy with energy dispersive spectroscopy. Geochemical simulations of aqueous systems containing PO4 and La-containing materials predicted that PO4 removal occurs via precipitation of poorly soluble LaPO4(s). Results from batch experiments agreed with those obtained from geochemical simulations, and mineralogical characterization of the reaction products were consistent with PO4 removal occurring primarily by precipitation of LaPO4(s). Between pH 1.5 and 12.9, La2(CO3)3(s) selectively removed PO4 over other anions from different aqueous matrices, including treated wastewater. However, the rate of PO4 removal decreased with increasing solution pH. In comparison to other solids, such as La(OH)3(s), La2(CO3)3(s) exhibits a relatively low solubility, particularly under slightly acidic conditions. Consequently, release of La3+ into the environment can be minimized when La2(CO3)3(s) is deployed for PO4 sequestration.
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Lantano , Contaminantes Químicos del Agua , Adsorción , Lantano/química , Fosfatos/química , AguaRESUMEN
Hafnia-zirconia (HfO2-ZrO2) solid solution thin films have emerged as viable candidates for electronic applications due to their compatibility with Si technology and demonstrated ferroelectricity at the nanoscale. The oxygen source in atomic layer deposition (ALD) plays a crucial role in determining the impurity concentration and phase composition of HfO2-ZrO2 within metal-ferroelectric-metal devices, notably at the Hf0.5Zr0.5O2 /TiN interface. The interface characteristics of HZO/TiN are fabricated via sequential no-atmosphere processing (SNAP) with either H2O or O2-plasma to study the influence of oxygen source on buried interfaces. Time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry reveals that HZO films grown via O2-plasma promote the development of an interfacial TiOx layer at the bottom HZO/TiN interface. The presence of the TiOx layer leads to the development of 111-fiber texture in HZO as confirmed by two-dimensional X-ray diffraction (2D-XRD). Structural and chemical differences between HZO films grown via H2O or O2-plasma were found to strongly affect electrical characteristics such as permittivity, leakage current density, endurance, and switching kinetics. While HZO films grown via H2O yielded a higher remanent polarization value of 25 µC/cm2, HZO films grown via O2-plasma exhibited a comparable Pr of 21 µC/cm2 polarization and enhanced field cycling endurance limit by almost 2 orders of magnitude. Our study illustrates how oxygen sources (O2-plasma or H2O) in ALD can be a viable way to engineer the interface and properties in HZO thin films.
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PbTiO(3)-based compounds are well-known ferroelectrics that exhibit a negative thermal expansion more or less in the tetragonal phase. The mechanism of negative thermal expansion has been studied by high-temperature neutron powder diffraction performed on two representative compounds, 0.7PbTiO(3)-0.3BiFeO(3) and 0.7PbTiO(3)-0.3Bi(Zn(1/2)Ti(1/2))O(3), whose negative thermal expansion is contrarily enhanced and weakened, respectively. With increasing temperature up to the Curie temperature, the spontaneous polarization displacement of Pb/Bi (δz(Pb/Bi)) is weakened in 0.7PbTiO(3)-0.3BiFeO(3) but well-maintained in 0.7PbTiO(3)-0.3Bi(Zn(1/2)Ti(1/2))O(3). There is an apparent correlation between tetragonality (c/a) and spontaneous polarization. Direct experimental evidence indicates that the spontaneous polarization originating from Pb/Bi-O hybridization is strongly associated with the negative thermal expansion. This mechanism can be used as a guide for the future design of negative thermal expansion of phase-transforming oxides.
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The superior piezoelectric properties of all polycrystalline ferroelectrics are based on the extent of non-180° domain wall motion under electrical and mechanical poling loads. To distinguish between 180° and non-180° domain wall motion in a soft-doped and a hard-doped lead zirconate titanate (PZT) ceramic, domain texture measurements were performed using x-ray and neutron diffraction after different loading procedures. Comparing the results to measurements of the remanent strain and piezoelectric coefficient allowed the differentiation between different microstructural contributions to the macroscopic parameters. Both types of ceramic showed similar behavior under electric field, but the hard-doped material was more susceptible to mechanical load. A considerable fraction of the piezoelectric coefficient originated from poling by the preferred orientation of 180° domains.
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Lanthanum modified bentonite (LMB) has been applied to eutrophic lakes to reduce phosphorus (P) concentrations in the water column and mitigate P release from sediments. Previous experiments suggest that natural organic matter (NOM) can interfere with phosphate (PO4)-binding to LMB and exacerbate lanthanum (La)-release from bentonite. This evidence served as motivation for this study to systematically determine the effects of NOM, solution pH, and bentonite as a La carrier on P removal. We conducted both geochemical modeling and controlled-laboratory batch kinetic experiments to understand the pH-dependent impacts of humic and fulvic acids on PO4-binding to LMB and La release from LMB. The role of bentonite was studied by comparing PO4 removal obtained by LMB and La3+ (added as LaCl3 salt to represent the La-containing component of LMB). Our results from both geochemical modeling and batch experiments indicate that the PO4-binding ability of LMB is decreased in the presence of NOM, and the decrease is more pronounced at pH 8.5 than at 6. At the highest evaluated NOM concentration (28 mg C L-1), PO4-removal by La3+ was substantially lower than that by LMB, implying that bentonite clay in LMB shielded La from interactions with NOM, while still allowing PO4 capture by La. Finally, the presence of NOM promoted La-release from LMB, and the amount of La released depended on solution pH and both the type (i.e., fulvic/humic acid ratio) and concentration of NOM. Overall, these results provide an important basis for management of P in lakes and eutrophication control that relies on LMB applications.