posted on 2014-04-01, 00:00authored byYanjia Chao, Olivier Horner, Philippe Vallée, Florian Meneau, Olga Alos-Ramos, Franck Hui, Mireille Turmine, Hubert Perrot, Jean Lédion
The initial stage of calcium carbonate
nucleation and growth, found
usually in “natural” precipitation conditions, is still
not well understood. The calcium carbonate formation for moderate
supersaturation level could be achieved by an original method called
the fast controlled precipitation (FCP) method. FCP was coupled with
SAXS (small-angle X-ray scattering) measurements to get insight into
the nucleation and growth mechanisms of calcium carbonate particles
in Ca(HCO3)2 aqueous solutions. Two size distributions
of particles were observed. The particle size evolutions of these
two distributions were obtained by analyzing the SAXS data. A nice
agreement was obtained between the total volume fractions of CaCO3 obtained by SAXS analysis and by pH-resistivity curve modeling
(from FCP tests).