Direct Nanoscale Imaging Reveals the Growth of Calcite
Crystals via Amorphous Nanoparticles
Version 2 2016-03-31, 13:54Version 2 2016-03-31, 13:54
Version 1 2016-03-03, 19:19Version 1 2016-03-03, 19:19
Posted on 2016-02-23 - 00:00
The formation of calcite (CaCO3), the most abundant
carbonate mineral on Earth and a common biomineral, has been the focus
of numerous studies. While recent research underlines the importance
of nonclassical crystallization pathways involving amorphous precursors,
direct evidence is lacking regarding the actual mechanism of calcite
growth via an amorphous phase. Here we show, using in situ atomic force microscopy and complementary techniques, that faceted
calcite can grow via a nonclassical particle-mediated colloidal crystal
growth mechanism that at the nanoscale mirrors classical ion-mediated
growth, and involves a layer-by-layer attachment of amorphous calcium
carbonate (ACC) nanoparticles, followed by their restructuring and
fusion with the calcite substrate in perfect crystallographic registry.
The ACC-to-calcite transformation occurs by an interface-coupled dissolution–reprecipitation
mechanism and obliterates or preserves the nanogranular texture of
the colloidal growth layer in the absence or presence of organic (macro)molecules,
respectively. These results show that, in addition to classical ion-mediated
crystal growth, a particle-mediated growth mechanism involving colloidal
epitaxy may operate in the case of an inorganic crystal such as calcite.
The gained knowledge may shed light on the mechanism of CaCO3 biomineralization, and should open new ways for the rational design
of novel biomimetic functional nanomaterials.
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Rodriguez-Navarro, Carlos; Cara, Alejandro Burgos; Elert, Kerstin; Putnis, Christine
V.; Ruiz-Agudo, Encarnacion (2016). Direct Nanoscale Imaging Reveals the Growth of Calcite
Crystals via Amorphous Nanoparticles. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.cgd.5b01180