21 research outputs found

    Formation of calcium sulfate through the aggregation of sub-3 nanometre primary species

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    The formation pathways of gypsum remain uncertain. Here, using truly in situ and fast time-resolved small-angle X-ray scattering, we quantify the four-stage solution-based nucleation and growth of gypsum (CaSO4 ·2H2O), an important mineral phase on Earth and Mars. The reaction starts through the fast formation of well-defined, primary species of <3 nm in length (stage I), followed in stage II by their arrangement into domains. The variations in volume fractions and electron densities suggest that these fast forming primary species contain Ca-SO4-cores that self-assemble in stage III into large aggregates. Within the aggregates these well-defined primary species start to grow (stage IV), and fully crystalize into gypsum through a structural rearrangement. Our results allow for a quantitative understanding of how natural calcium sulfate deposits may form on Earth and how a terrestrially unstable phase-like bassanite can persist at low-water activities currently dominating the surface of Mars

    Study of a Local Structure at the Interface between Corrosion Films and Carbon Steel Surface in Undersaturated CO₂ Environments

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    Industries transporting CO2 gas-saturated fluids have infrastructures made of carbon steel. This is a good material with great mechanical properties but prone to corrosion and potential failure. Corrosion in sweet environments involves the formation of FeCO3 as a corrosion film, which is recognized to play a protective role under certain conditions. This work on the dissolution of corrosion films in sweet environments, under acidic and undersaturated conditions, demonstrates that the effects on the integrity of steel are far more significant than the damage observed on the surface of the corrosion film. Our results prove that dissolution of FeCO3 involved the presence of an amorphous phase, the intermediate formation of FeCl2 or FeCl+, and the presence of a phase with short distance atom–atom correlations. The amorphous phase was identified as a mixture of retained γ-Fe and Fe3C. Partially broken α-Fe and Fe3C structures were identified to prove the damage on the material, confirming the interface zone without evident damage on the corrosion film. Dissolution affected both the α-Fe and FeCO3, with the lattice [102̅] from the FeCO3 crystalline structure being the fastest to dissolve. The damage of steel at the molecular scale was evident at the macroscale with pit depths of up to 250 μm. The impact on the integrity of steel can be, therefore, more drastic than frequently reported in industrial operations of CO2 transport industries that use cleaning procedures (e.g., acid treatment, pigging) as part of their operational activities

    How Short-Lived Ikaite Affects Calcite Crystallization

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    The pathways of CaCO₃ crystallization are manifold, often involving one or several metastable amorphous or nanocrystalline intermediate phases. The presence of such intermediates is often overlooked, because they are short-lived and/or occur at small molar fractions. However, their occurrence does not just impact the mechanisms and pathways of formation of the final stable CaCO₃ phase, but also affects their crystal size, shape, and structure. Here we document the presence of a short-lived intermediate through in situ and time-resolved small and wide-angle X-ray scattering combined with high resolution electron microscope observations. When ikaite forms concomitant with the dissolution of amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) but prior to calcite formation, fairly large glendonite-type calcite crystals grow despite the presence of citrate ligands that usually reduce crystal size. These were ideal seeding crystals for further crystallization from supersaturated ions in solution. In contrast, in the absence of ikaite the crystallization of calcite proceeds through transformation from ACC, resulting in fine-grained spherulitic calcite with sizes ∼8 times smaller than when ikaite was present. Noteworthy is that the formation of the intermediate ikaite, although it consumes less than 3 mol % of the total precipitated CaCO₃, still clearly affected the calcite formation mechanism

    Understanding amorphous silica scaling under well-constrained conditions inside geothermal pipelines

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    Amorphous silica is a common precipitate in modern and ancient hot springs and in geothermal power plants, yet the corresponding precipitation rates and mechanisms are still highly debated, primarily due to the plethora of parameters that can affect the reactions in natural waters. Here, we report the results from a first ever industrial-scale time-resolved (1 day to 10 weeks) study of silica precipitation conducted at the Hellisheiði geothermal power plant (SW-Iceland). We show that such in-work pipelines of a geothermal power plant are ideal environments to investigate silica precipitation because the physicochemical conditions are well constrained and constantly monitored. Our results document that amorphous silica forms via two distinct precipitation modes: (1) the fast deposition of continuous botryoidal silica layers and (2) the growth of 3D fan- or ridge-shaped silica aggregates. The continuous layers grow by heterogeneous nucleation and subsequent surface controlled growth by monomer addition. In contrary, the 3D aggregates form through homogeneous nucleation of silica nano- and microparticles in solution, followed by deposition and cementation on the surface of the botryoidal layer. From the time-resolved data, silica precipitation rates of over 1 g m−2 day-1 are derived. Over time, this deposition of silica on pipelines and fluid handling equipment is detrimental to geothermal power production. Our data does not only help improve our understanding of silica precipitation from geothermal fluids, but the determined silica precipitation mechanisms and rates help improve mitigation strategies against silica scaling inside in-work geothermal power plants

    Physicochemical and Additive Controls on the Multistep Precipitation Pathway of Gypsum

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    Synchrotron-based small- and wide-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS/WAXS) was used to examine in situ the precipitation of gypsum (CaSO4·2H2O) from solution. We determined the role of (I) supersaturation, (II) temperature and (III) additives (Mg2+ and citric acid) on the precipitation mechanism and rate of gypsum. Detailed analysis of the SAXS data showed that for all tested supersaturations and temperatures the same nucleation pathway was maintained, i.e., formation of primary particles that aggregate and transform/re-organize into gypsum. In the presence of Mg2+ more primary particle are formed compared to the pure experiment, but the onset of their transformation/reorganization was slowed down. Citrate reduces the formation of primary particles resulting in a longer induction time of gypsum formation. Based on the WAXS data we determined that the precipitation rate of gypsum increased 5-fold from 4 to 40 °C, which results in an effective activation energy of ~30 kJ·mol−1. Mg2+ reduces the precipitation rate of gypsum by more than half, most likely by blocking the attachment sites of the growth units, while citric acid only weakly hampers the growth of gypsum by lowering the effective supersaturation. In short, our results show that the nucleation mechanism is independent of the solution conditions and that Mg2+ and citric acid influence differently the nucleation pathway and growth kinetics of gypsum. These insights are key for further improving our ability to control the crystallization process of calcium sulphate

    Glioblastoma-derived spheroid cultures as an experimental model for analysis of EGFR anomalies

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    Glioblastoma cell cultures in vitro are frequently used for investigations on the biology of tumors or new therapeutic approaches. Recent reports have emphasized the importance of cell culture type for maintenance of tumor original features. Nevertheless, the ability of GBM cells to preserve EGFR overdosage in vitro remains controversial. Our experimental approach was based on quantitative analysis of EGFR gene dosage in vitro both at DNA and mRNA level. Real-time PCR data were verified with a FISH method allowing for a distinction between EGFR amplification and polysomy 7. We demonstrated that EGFR amplification accompanied by EGFRwt overexpression was maintained in spheroids, but these phenomena were gradually lost in adherent culture. We noticed a rapid decrease of EGFR overdosage already at the initial stage of cell culture establishment. In contrast to EGFR amplification, the maintenance of polysomy 7 resulted in EGFR locus gain and stabilization even in long-term adherent culture in serum presence. Surprisingly, the EGFRwt expression pattern did not reflect the latter phenomenon and we observed no overexpression of the tested gene. Moreover, quantitative analysis demonstrated that expression of the truncated variant of receptor—EGFRvIII was preserved in GBM-derived spheroids at a level comparable to the initial tumor tissue. Our findings are especially important in the light of research using glioblastoma culture as the experimental model for testing novel EGFR-targeted therapeutics in vitro, with special emphasis on the most common mutated form of receptor—EGFRvIII

    A highly reactive precursor in the iron sulfide system

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    Iron sulfur (Fe–S) phases have been implicated in the emergence of life on early Earth due to their catalytic role in the synthesis of prebiotic molecules. Similarly, Fe–S phases are currently of high interest in the development of green catalysts and energy storage. Here we report the synthesis and structure of a nanoparticulate phase (FeSnano) that is a necessary solid-phase precursor to the conventionally assumed initial precipitate in the iron sulfide system, mackinawite. The structure of FeSnano contains tetrahedral iron, which is compensated by monosulfide and polysulfide sulfur species. These together dramatically affect the stability and enhance the reactivity of FeSnano

    Particle-Mediated Nucleation Pathways Are Imprinted in the Internal Structure of Calcium Sulfate Single Crystals

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    Calcium sulfate minerals are found in nature as three hydrates: gypsum (CaSO4·2H2O), bassanite (CaSO4·0.5H2O), and anhydrite (CaSO4). Due to their relevance in natural and industrial processes, the formation pathways of calcium sulfates from aqueous solution have been the subject of intensive research, and there is a growing body of literature, suggesting that calcium sulfates form through nonclassical nanoparticle-mediated crystallization processes. We showed earlier (Stawski et al. Nat. Commun.2016, 7, 11177) that at the early stages in the precipitation reaction, calcium sulfate nanocrystals nucleate through the reorganization and coalescence of aggregates rather than through classical unit addition. Here, we used low-dose dark field (DF) transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and electron diffraction and document that these restructuring processes do not continue until a final near-perfectly homogeneous single crystal is obtained. Instead, we show that the growth process yields a final imperfect mesocrystal with an overall morphology resembling that of a single crystal, yet composed of smaller nanodomains. Our data reveal that organic-free calcium sulfate mesocrystals grown by a particle mediated-pathway may preserve in the final crystal structure a “memory” or “imprint” of their nonclassical nucleation process, something that has been overlooked until now. Furthermore, the nanoscale misalignment of the structural subunits within these crystals might propagate through the length-scales, which is potentially expressed macroscopically as misaligned zones/domains in large single crystals. This is akin to observations in some of the giant crystals from the Naica Mine, Chihuahua, Mexico

    Evolution of microstructure in mixed niobia-hybrid silica thin films from sol–gel precursors

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    The evolution of structure in sol–gel derived mixed bridged silsesquioxane-niobium alkoxide sols and drying thin films was monitored in situ by small-angle X-ray scattering. Since sol–gel condensation of metal alkoxides proceeds much faster than that of silicon alkoxides, the incorporation of d-block metal dopants into silica typically leads to formation of densely packed nano-sized metal oxide clusters that we refer as metal oxide building blocks in a silica-based matrix. SAXS was used to study the process of niobia building block formation while drying the sol as a thin film at 40–80 °C. The SAXS curves of mixed niobia-hybrid silica sols were dominated by the electron density contrast between sol particles and surrounding solvent. As the solvent evaporated and the sol particles approached each other, a correlation peak emerged. Since TEM microscopy revealed the absence of mesopores, the correlation peak was caused by a heterogeneous system of electron-rich regions and electron poor regions. The regions were assigned to small clusters that are rich in niobium and which are dispersed in a matrix that mainly consisted of hybrid silica. The correlation peak was associated with the typical distances between the electron dense clusters and corresponded with distances in real space of 1–3 nm. A relationship between the prehydrolysis time of the silica precursor and the size of the niobia building blocks was observed. When 1,2-bis(triethoxysilyl)ethane was first hydrolyzed for 30 min before adding niobium penta-ethoxide, the niobia building blocks reached a radius of 0.4 nm. Simultaneous hydrolysis of the two precursors resulted in somewhat larger average building block radii of 0.5–0.6 nm. This study shows that acid-catalyzed sol–gel polymerization of mixed hybrid silica niobium alkoxides can be rationalized and optimized by monitoring the structural evolution using time-resolved SAXS

    A facile method for the density determination of ceramic thin films using X-ray reflectivity

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    A fast and non-destructive method based on X-ray reflectivity was developed to determine the density of sol-gel derived ceramic thin films, without prior assumptions on the microstructure of the system. The thin film density is calculated from the critical angle θc, i.e. the maximum angle at which total external reflection is still observed, which becomes increasingly difficult for imperfect films. We propose a simple numerical approach, instead of laborious fitting procedures, to determine the thin film density. A pseudo-critical angle, θpc, was defined by the first minimum in the 3rd derivative of the reflectivity curves. The measured samples were compared with calibration curves obtained from simulations with changing film densities. Although the absolute positions of θc and θpc are different, similar shifts are observed with changing density. The accuracy of the described method was validated by determining the density of single crystal substrates (ρrel = 100 %) and by Rutherford backscattering spectroscopy in combination with scanning electron microscopy. Varying sample size, film thickness, and film/interface roughness of yttria-stabilized zirconia films were found to have no influence on the final calculated density
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