Barium sulfate (BaSO4) is a common scale-forming mineral in natural and engineered systems, yet the rates and mechanisms of heterogeneous BaSO4 nucleation are not understood. To address these, we created idealized interfaces on which to study heterogeneous nucleation rates and mechanisms, which also are good models for organic-water interfaces: self-assembled thin films terminated with different functional groups (i.e., -COOH, -SH, or mixed -SH & COOH) coated on glass slides. BaSO4 precipitation on coatings from Barite-supersaturated solutions (saturation index, SI, = 1.1) was investigated using grazing-incidence small-angle X-ray scattering. After reaction for 1 h, a little amount of BaSO4 formed on hydrophilic bare and -COOH coated glasses. Meanwhile, BaSO4 nucleation was significantly promoted on hydrophobic -SH and mixed -SH & COOH coatings. This is because substrate hydrophobicity likely affected the interfacial energy and hence thermodynamic favorability of heterogeneous nucleation. The heterogeneous BaSO4 nucleation and growth kinetics were found to be affected by the amount of Ba(2+) adsorption onto the substrate and incipient BaSO4 nuclei. The importance of Ba(2+) adsorption was further corroborated by the finding that precipitation rate increased under [Ba(2+)]/[SO4(2-)] concentration ratios >1. These observations suggest that thermodynamic favorability for nucleation is governed by substrate-water interfacial energy, while given favorable thermodynamics, the rate is governed by ion attachment to substrates and incipient nuclei.
Classical electrical double layer (EDL) models are foundational to the representation of atomistic structure and reactivity at charged interfaces. An important limitation to these models is their dependence on a mean-field approximation that is strictly valid for dilute aqueous solutions. Theoretical efforts to overcome this limitation are severely impeded by the lack of visualization of the structure over a wide range of ion concentration. Here, we report the salinity-dependent evolution of EDL structure at negatively charged mica–water interfaces, revealing transition from the Langmuir-type charge compensation in dilute salt solutions to nonclassical charge overscreening in highly concentrated solutions. The EDL structure in this overcharging regime is characterized by the development of both lateral positional correlation between adsorbed ions and vertical layering of alternating cations and anions reminiscent of the structures of strongly correlated ionic liquids. These EDL ions can spontaneously grow into nanocrystalline nuclei of ionic compounds at threshold ion concentrations that are significantly lower than the bulk solubility limit. These results shed light on the impact of ion cooperativity that drives heterogeneous nonclassical behaviors of the EDL in high-salinity conditions.
Amorphous calcium carbonate is found in the early stages of biomineral formation. Its moldability and its kinetic persistence against crystallization make it of potential interest to the development of biomimetic materials. The presence of water and of inorganic impurities such as Mg 2+ has been reported to increase its kinetic stability. Yet, the precise mechanisms of stabilization as well as the link between structural dynamics and crystallization kinetics are still missing. Here, we report the vibrational and diffusive dynamics of water and other atomic constituents in a series of Mg 2+-doped solid amorphous calcium carbonates revealed using coherent X-ray and incoherent neutron scattering. This unique combination of techniques presents a novel view on the nanoscopic dynamic behavior of these amorphous materials: the presence of Mg 2+ results in a higher frequency of structural rearrangements within the material. However, this increased dynamic behavior does not translate into a higher crystallization kinetics due to a concomitant stiffening of the water hydrogen bond network.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.