X-ray-driven reaction front dynamics at calcite-water interfaces

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Abstract

The interface betweenminerals and aqueous solutions hosts globally important biogeochemical processes such as the growth and dissolution of carbonate minerals. Understanding such processes requires spatially and temporally resolved observations and experimental controls that preciselymanipulate the interfacial thermodynamic state. Using the intense radiation fields of a focused synchrotron x-ray beam, we drove dissolution at the calcite/water interface and simultaneously probed the dynamics of the propagating reaction fronts using surface x-ray microscopy. Evolving surface structures were controlled by the time-dependent solution composition, as characterized by a kinetic reactionmodel. At extreme disequilibria, we observed the onset of reaction front instabilities with velocities of > 30 nanometers per second. These instabilities serve as a signature of transport-limited dissolution of calcite under extreme disequilibrium.

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Laanait, N., Callagon, E. B. R., Zhang, Z., Sturchio, N. C., Lee, S. S., & Fenter, P. (2015). X-ray-driven reaction front dynamics at calcite-water interfaces. Science, 349(6254), 1330–1334. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aab3272

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