Calcium carbonate (CaCO3) is an important component at the Earth’s surface, and it has many industrial applications. It forms rocks (limestone), coral reefs, and other biominerals; it affects the composition of natural waters, especially by dissolution, it is produced industrially, and it can form lime scale. Therefore, calcium carbonate has been a subject of a broad range of research and engineering fields and industries. A thorough understanding of all formation and dissolution processes that can take place is key in increasing the chance of success in research and development of new applications. I used molecular dynamic simulations to study the behaviour of calcium during different stages in the formation and dissolution of calcium car...
Calcium carbonate is an earth-abundant biomineral that exists in a variety of marine environments, i...
Calcium carbonate is an abundant substance that can be created in several mineral forms by the react...
Mechanistic pathways relevant to mineralization are not well-understood fundamentally, let alone in ...
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...
Empirical thesis."The Bragg Institute, Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation ; Aust...
The interfaces of calcite with water, dehydrated and hydrated amorphous calcium carbonate are studie...
Calcium carbonate is an earth-abundant material that exists in a variety of natural environments, in...
Organic additives are well known to influence the nucleation and growth of minerals. A combination o...
Calcium carbonate, the most common among other biogenic minerals, is widely used in skeletal compone...
A new reactive force field has been derived that allows the modelling of speciation in the aqueous-c...
Amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) and vaterite are not very common in abiotic systems, but they play...
Calcium carbonate is a ubiquitous mineral that represents one of the most significant biominerals,a ...
Copyright © 2018 American Chemical Society. Amorphous calcium carbonate is found in the early stages...
The effect of crystal seeds on calcium carbonate (CaCO3) cluster formation in aqueous solution is of...
Calcium carbonate is an earth-abundant biomineral that exists in a variety of marine environments, i...
Calcium carbonate is an abundant substance that can be created in several mineral forms by the react...
Mechanistic pathways relevant to mineralization are not well-understood fundamentally, let alone in ...
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...
Empirical thesis."The Bragg Institute, Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation ; Aust...
The interfaces of calcite with water, dehydrated and hydrated amorphous calcium carbonate are studie...
Calcium carbonate is an earth-abundant material that exists in a variety of natural environments, in...
Organic additives are well known to influence the nucleation and growth of minerals. A combination o...
Calcium carbonate, the most common among other biogenic minerals, is widely used in skeletal compone...
A new reactive force field has been derived that allows the modelling of speciation in the aqueous-c...
Amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) and vaterite are not very common in abiotic systems, but they play...
Calcium carbonate is a ubiquitous mineral that represents one of the most significant biominerals,a ...
Copyright © 2018 American Chemical Society. Amorphous calcium carbonate is found in the early stages...
The effect of crystal seeds on calcium carbonate (CaCO3) cluster formation in aqueous solution is of...
Calcium carbonate is an earth-abundant biomineral that exists in a variety of marine environments, i...
Calcium carbonate is an abundant substance that can be created in several mineral forms by the react...
Mechanistic pathways relevant to mineralization are not well-understood fundamentally, let alone in ...