Organic additives are well known to influence the nucleation and growth of minerals. A combination of experimental and theoretical methods has been used to probe how three simple additives, containing varying numbers of carboxylate groups, influence the early stages of the growth of calcium carbonate. Computationally, the free energy landscape has been examined for each additive binding to Ca2+, the calcium carbonate ion pair, the surface of an amorphous calcium carbonate nanoparticle, and the basal plane of calcite. The different influence of the three organic ligands on the early stages of growth of calcium carbonate observed experimentally can be rationalised in terms of the degree of association of each anion with the species present pr...
The interfaces of calcite with water, dehydrated and hydrated amorphous calcium carbonate are studie...
Using molecular dynamics, we simulate the crystallisation of calcite from an amorphous calcium carbo...
Amorphous mineral phases, e.g. amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) that occurs ubiquitously in nature,...
Calcium carbonate is an abundant substance that can be created in several mineral forms by the react...
Organisms often employ non-classical crystallisation mechanisms to create the remarkable materials t...
The biomineralization of calcium carbonate is masterfully directed by organic macromolecules present...
Calcium carbonate, the most common among other biogenic minerals, is widely used in skeletal compone...
Amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) and vaterite are not very common in abiotic systems, but they play...
Biological organisms display sophisticated control of nucleation and crystallization of minerals. In...
Many important phenomena depend on calcium carbonate nucleation and crystallisation, e.g. the incrus...
Amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) is of high interest because of its critical role in biomineralizat...
Over the past four decades, the interest in biomineralisation has rapidly increased, helped along by...
Calcium carbonate (CaCO3) is an important component at the Earth’s surface, and it has many industri...
Determining a complete atomic-level picture of how minerals grow from aqueous solution remains a cha...
Calcium carbonate is an earth-abundant biomineral that exists in a variety of marine environments, i...
The interfaces of calcite with water, dehydrated and hydrated amorphous calcium carbonate are studie...
Using molecular dynamics, we simulate the crystallisation of calcite from an amorphous calcium carbo...
Amorphous mineral phases, e.g. amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) that occurs ubiquitously in nature,...
Calcium carbonate is an abundant substance that can be created in several mineral forms by the react...
Organisms often employ non-classical crystallisation mechanisms to create the remarkable materials t...
The biomineralization of calcium carbonate is masterfully directed by organic macromolecules present...
Calcium carbonate, the most common among other biogenic minerals, is widely used in skeletal compone...
Amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) and vaterite are not very common in abiotic systems, but they play...
Biological organisms display sophisticated control of nucleation and crystallization of minerals. In...
Many important phenomena depend on calcium carbonate nucleation and crystallisation, e.g. the incrus...
Amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) is of high interest because of its critical role in biomineralizat...
Over the past four decades, the interest in biomineralisation has rapidly increased, helped along by...
Calcium carbonate (CaCO3) is an important component at the Earth’s surface, and it has many industri...
Determining a complete atomic-level picture of how minerals grow from aqueous solution remains a cha...
Calcium carbonate is an earth-abundant biomineral that exists in a variety of marine environments, i...
The interfaces of calcite with water, dehydrated and hydrated amorphous calcium carbonate are studie...
Using molecular dynamics, we simulate the crystallisation of calcite from an amorphous calcium carbo...
Amorphous mineral phases, e.g. amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) that occurs ubiquitously in nature,...