| Literature DB >> 29109392 |
Moritz Liesegang1, Ralf Milke2, Christine Kranz3, Gregor Neusser3.
Abstract
Natural nanoparticles are fundamental building blocks of Earth's bio- and geosphere. Amorphous silica nanoparticles are ubiquitous in nature, but fundamental knowledge of their interaction mechanisms and role in mineral replacement reactions is limited. Here we show how silica nanoparticles replace Cretaceous calcite bivalve shells in a volume- and texture-preserving process. Electron tomography reveals that mineral replacement transfers calcite crystallographic orientations to twinned photonic crystals composed of face-centered cubic silica sphere stacks. During the face-specific replacement process, silica nanoparticles continuously nucleate, aggregate, and form a lattice of uniform spheres parallel to calcite low-energy facets. We explain the replacement process with a new model that unifies recently proposed, probably universal mechanisms of interface-coupled dissolution-precipitation and aggregation-based crystallization; both key mechanisms in geological processes and nanomaterials design and synthesis.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29109392 PMCID: PMC5673956 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-06458-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Microphotographs of silica photonic crystals between crossed polarizers. (a) Striated photonic crystals with different colors and orientations. (b) Crystals display lamellae with periodically alternating colors. Twin (TP) and cleavage (CP) planes are consistent with calcite crystallographic orientations. Scale bars are 100 µm.
Figure 2Secondary electron images of amorphous silica sphere geometry and microstructures. (a) Polished surface of a twinned crystal with alternating sphere array orientation in an A-B-A-B pattern. Dashed lines highlight the {018} twin planes (TP). (b) HF acid-etched spheres show a concentric layering. Arrows highlight ~30 nm-sized subparticles. Scale bars: (a) 1 µm, (b) 100 nm.
Figure 3Nanoscale structures and schematic replacement process of twinned calcite crystals. (a) Three-dimensional visualization of pores in adjacent twin lamellae (4183 × 1733 nm2), projected along uvw [01–1]. The calcite {018} twin plane (TP) separates A B C A B C sphere stacking sequences of fcc lattices. The top view (lower left) shows spheres in the fcc (111) layer (1654 × 1043 nm2). (b) The orientation of calcite {104} cleavage planes (CP) changes rhythmically between twins I and II. Amorphous silica particles nucleate close to the calcite surface, aggregate in the interfacial fluid film, and self-assemble into close-packed fcc (111) planes.