Nucleation of metastable aragonite CaCO <sub>3</sub> in seawater
Article 2015 en
Authors
WS
Wenhao Sun
SJ
Saivenkataraman Jayaraman
WC
Wei Chen
Abstract
1 min read
Significance Crystallization from solution is a materials synthesis process common both in nature and in the laboratory. Unlike conventional high-temperature solid-state synthesis, solution-based syntheses often yield metastable phases, contrary to expectations from equilibrium thermodynamics. Using a recently developed ab initio scheme to calculate the surface energy of a critical nucleus in equilibrium with the aqueous environment, we present a framework to compare relative nucleation rates between competing polymorphs as a function of solution chemistry. We apply this approach to demonstrate how seawater chemistry can preferentially bias nucleation toward the metastable aragonite phase of calcium carbonate, rather than the stable phase calcite––which is of great relevance to biomineralization, carbon sequestration, paleogeochemistry, and the vulnerability of marine life to ocean acidification.
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