3 research outputs found

    Using simulation to understand the structure and properties of hydrated amorphous calcium carbonate

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    We report results from studies using four different protocols to prepare hydrated amorphous calcium carbonate, ranging from random initial structures to melting hydrated mineral structures. All protocols give good agreement with experimental X-ray structure factors. However, the thermodynamic properties, ion coordination environments, and distribution of water for the structures produced by the protocols show statistically significant variation depending on the protocols used. We discuss the diffusivity of water through the various structures and its relation to experiments. We show that one protocol (based on melting ikaite) gives a structure where the water is mobile, due to the presence of porosity in the amorphous structure. We conclude that our models of hydrated amorphous calcium carbonate do give a range of behaviour that resembles that observed experimentally, although the variation is less marked in the simulations than in experiments

    Structural investigations of N-methylformamide-water mixtures at various concentrations

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    Structural investigations of N-methylformamide-water mixtures (NMF-water) are performed at room temperature and atmospheric pressure for two water molar fractions x w = 0.66 and x w = 0.75 . This paper extends our recent study on the equimolar system. H-bond networks are preferentially formed between NMF and water molecules. Among a large variety of DFT optimized models, X-ray scattering data shows that the local order of each mixture is better described by a tetramer where one NMF molecule is connected to three water molecules. No self-association is observed in the considered systems. The effect of hydration is compared to the temperature and pressure effects in some hydrogen-bonded liquids
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