Chemical systems that are far from thermodynamic equilibrium may form complex temporal and spatiotemporal structures. In our paper, we present unusual precipitation patterns that have been observed in the system of Cu(II)-oxalate. Starting with a pellet of copper sulfate immersed in or by pumping copper sulfate solution into a horizontal layer of sodium oxalate solution, we have observed the formation of a precipitate ring and an array of radially oriented thin fingers. The development of these patterns is related to the internal structure of the different crystals, the gravity flow, and the circular symmetry of the experimental arrangement.
Text AbstractBackground: Many biological systems contain complex precipitation patterns. These structures are considered to be the result of finely tuned and genetically encoded developmental pathways. The amount of encoded information needed to generate and manipulate these structures is poorly understood. Investigating the dynamics of spontaneous pattern formation in non-biological systems provides insights to the physio-chemical phenomena that biological systems must have harnessed for living systems and that modern scientists need to understand for complex nano-technological applications. Results: Here we show that highly complex, precipitation patterns similar to those found in biological systems can be formed in simple Cu(II)-oxalate systems. In these Cu(II)-oxalate systems, structures are constructed by a hierarchy of multiple processes that are precisely self-organized in space and time to form interconnected causal networks that generate complex and diverse structures dependent on construction trajectories that can be controlled by minor variations of initial conditions. Conclusions: Highly complex precipitation patterns similar to those found in biological systems can be generated without a correspondingly complex set of instructions. Our result has implications for understanding early biotic systems that existed prior to the evolution of sophisticated genetic machinery. From an applications perspective, processes and structures that occur spontaneously are the building blocks for novel system chemistry based technologies where products are self-constructed. We also provide a simple model of chemical system that generates biomimetic structures for the study of fundamental processes involved in chemical self-construction.
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