The rates of reduction of chromium (VI) to chromium (III) with H2S in
NaCl solutions have been measured as a function of temperature (15-50-
degrees-C), pH (7.5-10.5) and ionic strength (0-2 M). The overall rate
constant (k, M-1 min-1) in: d[Cr(VI)]/dt = -k[Cr(VI)][H2S]T can be de
termined from (SD = 0.07 in log k): log k = 16.19 - 1.06pH - 2300.9/T
where the ionic strength term has been overlooked because it does not
significantly affect the kinetics. The energy of activation is 43.6 +/
- 1.5 kJ mol-1. The rates of reduction in real seawater Samples appear
ed to be 2-3 times faster than in NaCl at the same ionic strength. Bas
ed on these kinetic measurements, half times of Cr(VI) range from few
hours (4-6 h) to many days (160-250 d), respectively, at 1 mM or 1 mu
M H2ST in anoxic waters.