posted on 2014-02-05, 00:00authored byL. N. Schultz, K. Dideriksen, L. Lakshtanov, S. S. Hakim, D. Müter, F. Haußer, K. Bechgaard, S. L. S. Stipp
Grain
size increases when crystals respond to dynamic equilibrium
in a saturated solution. The pathway to coarsening is generally thought
to be driven by Ostwald ripening, that is, simultaneous dissolution
and reprecipitation, but models to describe Ostwald ripening neglect
solid–solid interactions and crystal shapes. Grain coarsening
of calcite, CaCO3, is relevant for biomineralization and
commercial products and is an important process in diagenesis of sediments
to rock during geological time. We investigated coarsening of pure,
synthetic calcite powder of sub-micrometer diameter crystals and aged
it in saturated solutions at 23, 100, and 200 °C for up to 261
days. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and Brunauer–Emmett–Teller
(BET) surface area analysis showed rapid coarsening at 100 and 200
°C. Evidence of particle growth at 23 °C was not visible
by SEM, but high resolution X-ray diffraction (XRD) data demonstrated
steady growth of nanometer crystallites. The results can be described
by theory where grains coarsen preferentially by aggregation at early
times and high temperatures and by Ostwald ripening at later stages.
Crystal form and dimension are influenced by the transition from one
growth mechanism to the other. This has been poorly described by mean
field coarsening models and offers predictive power to grain coarsening
models.