The Fluid Cell attachment to the Atomic Force Microscope can be used to emulate batch and flow-through reactors to observe the progression of mineral-water interaction processes on individual surfaces. Recent applications of this method include the in-situ measurement of mineral dissolution or growth rates by comparing time-sequenced images. Because AFM images are collected as lines of information by the physical rastering of a lever over a mineral surface, there are inherent limitations to the range of reaction rates compatible with in-situ AFM methods. This investigation examines the AFM-compatible range of monolayer formation or removal rates on individual mineral surfaces. We estimate that AFM can be used to observe dissolution or growt...
Abstract The evolution of the surface topography of a calcite crystal subject to dis...
The microscopic understanding of the crystal growth and dissolution processes have been greatly adva...
| openaire: EC/FP7/610446/EU//PAMSThe microscopic understanding of the crystal growth and dissolutio...
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) enables in situ observations of mineral fluid reactions to be made at ...
Abstract: The evolution of the surface topography of a calcite crystal subject to dissolution is doc...
Abstract: The evolution of the surface topography of a calcite crystal subject to dissolution is doc...
Abstract: The evolution of the surface topography of a calcite crystal subject to dissolution is doc...
Abstract: The evolution of the surface topography of a calcite crystal subject to dissolution is doc...
Abstract: The evolution of the surface topography of a calcite crystal subject to dissolution is doc...
Abstract: The evolution of the surface topography of a calcite crystal subject to dissolution is doc...
In the Earth's upper crust, where aqueous fluids can circulate freely, most mineral transformations ...
Atomic force microscopy has been used to observe the surface dynamics during dissolution of polished...
The dissolution behavior of the barite (001) surface in pure water at 30℃ was investigated using in ...
International audienceThe macroscopic dissolution rate of minerals is generally deduced from solutio...
In the Earth's upper crust, where aqueous fluids can circulate freely, most mineral transformations ...
Abstract The evolution of the surface topography of a calcite crystal subject to dis...
The microscopic understanding of the crystal growth and dissolution processes have been greatly adva...
| openaire: EC/FP7/610446/EU//PAMSThe microscopic understanding of the crystal growth and dissolutio...
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) enables in situ observations of mineral fluid reactions to be made at ...
Abstract: The evolution of the surface topography of a calcite crystal subject to dissolution is doc...
Abstract: The evolution of the surface topography of a calcite crystal subject to dissolution is doc...
Abstract: The evolution of the surface topography of a calcite crystal subject to dissolution is doc...
Abstract: The evolution of the surface topography of a calcite crystal subject to dissolution is doc...
Abstract: The evolution of the surface topography of a calcite crystal subject to dissolution is doc...
Abstract: The evolution of the surface topography of a calcite crystal subject to dissolution is doc...
In the Earth's upper crust, where aqueous fluids can circulate freely, most mineral transformations ...
Atomic force microscopy has been used to observe the surface dynamics during dissolution of polished...
The dissolution behavior of the barite (001) surface in pure water at 30℃ was investigated using in ...
International audienceThe macroscopic dissolution rate of minerals is generally deduced from solutio...
In the Earth's upper crust, where aqueous fluids can circulate freely, most mineral transformations ...
Abstract The evolution of the surface topography of a calcite crystal subject to dis...
The microscopic understanding of the crystal growth and dissolution processes have been greatly adva...
| openaire: EC/FP7/610446/EU//PAMSThe microscopic understanding of the crystal growth and dissolutio...