Timescales of interface-coupled dissolution-precipitation reactions oncarbonates

被引:0
|
作者
Fran?ois Renard [1 ,2 ]
Anja R?yne
Christine V.Putnis [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] The Njord Centre, Physics of Geological Processes, Departments of Geoscience and Physics, University of Oslo
[2] Institut für Mineralogie, University of Münster
[3] Univ. Grenoble Alpes, Univ. Savoie Mont Blanc, CNRS
[4] The Institute for Geoscience Research (TIGeR), Department of Chemistry, Curtin University
基金
欧盟地平线“2020”;
关键词
Carbonates; Atomic force microscopy; Dissolution; Precipitation; Boundary layer; Replacement;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
P574 [矿物的物理化学];
学科分类号
摘要
In the Earth’s upper crust, where aqueous fluids can circulate freely, most mineral transformations are controlled by the coupling between the dissolution of a mineral that releases chemical species into the fluid and precipitation of new minerals that contain some of the released species in their crystal structure, the coupled process being driven by a reduction of the total free-energy of the system. Such coupled dissolution-precipitation processes occur at the fluid-mineral interface where the chemical gradients are highest and heterogeneous nucleation can be promoted, therefore controlling the growth kinetics of the new minerals. Time-lapse nanoscale imaging using Atomic Force Microscopy(AFM) can monitor the whole coupled process under in situ conditions and allow identifying the time scales involved and the controlling parameters. We have performed a series of experiments on carbonate minerals(calcite, siderite, dolomite and magnesite) where dissolution of the carbonate and precipitation of a new mineral was imaged and followed through time. In the presence of various species in the reacting fluid(e. g. antimony, selenium, arsenic, phosphate), the calcium released during calcite dissolution binds with these species to form new minerals that sequester these hazardous species in the form of a stable solid phase. For siderite, the coupling involves the release of Feions that subsequently become oxidized and then precipitate in the form of FeIIIoxyhydroxides. For dolomite and magnesite,dissolution in the presence of pure water(undersaturated with any possible phase) results in the immediate precipitation of hydrated Mg-carbonate phases. In all these systems, dissolution and precipitation are coupled and occur directly in a boundary layer at the carbonate surface. Scaling arguments demonstrate that the thickness of this boundary layer is controlled by the rate of carbonate dissolution,the equilibrium concentration of the precipitates and the kinetics of diffusion of species in a boundary layer. From these parameters a characteristic time scale and a characteristic length scale of the boundary layer can be derived. This boundary layer grows with time and never reaches a steady state thickness as long as dissolution of the carbonate is faster than precipitation of the new mineral. At ambient temperature, the surface reactions of these dissolving carbonates occur on time-scales of the order of seconds to minutes, indicating the rapid surface rearrangement of carbonates in the presence of aqueous fluids. As a consequence, many carbonate-fluid reactions in low temperature environments are controlled by local thermodynamic equilibria rather than by the global equilibrium in the whole system.
引用
收藏
页码:17 / 27
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Spontaneous hierarchical surface engineering of minerals through coupled dissolution-precipitation chemistry
    Jiang, Jinyang
    Zhang, Jiawen
    Wang, Lanxin
    Lu, Zeyu
    Wang, Fengjuan
    Liu, Zhiyong
    Zeng, Hongbo
    AGGREGATE, 2024, 5 (01):
  • [22] Dissolution-precipitation reactions controlling fast formation of dolomite under hydrothermal conditions
    Montes-Hernandez, German
    Findling, Nathaniel
    Renard, Francois
    APPLIED GEOCHEMISTRY, 2016, 73 : 169 - 177
  • [23] Interactions between deformation and dissolution-precipitation reactions in plagioclase feldspar at greenschist facies
    Gardner, Joe
    Wheeler, John
    Mariani, Elisabetta
    LITHOS, 2021, 396
  • [24] Model of interface-coupled dissolution-precipitation mechanism of pseudomorphic replacement reaction in aqueous solutions based on the system of cerussite PbCO3 - pyromorphite Pb5(PO4)3Cl
    Manecki, Maciej
    Kwasniak-Korninek, Monika
    Majka, Jaroslaw M.
    Rakovan, John
    GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA, 2020, 289 : 1 - 13
  • [25] DISSOLUTION-PRECIPITATION MODEL OF ANODIC FILM FORMATION
    REDDY, AKN
    JOURNAL OF ELECTROANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 1970, 28 (01): : 217 - &
  • [26] Dissolution-precipitation creep under cyclic stress
    Jordan, G
    Aldushin, K
    Lohkämper, T
    Schmahl, WW
    GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA, 2005, 69 (10) : A314 - A314
  • [27] Effect of cyclic loading on dissolution-precipitation creep
    Z. N. Skvortsova
    D. N. Zubov
    A. E. Muralev
    V. Yu. Traskin
    Colloid Journal, 2011, 73 : 683 - 687
  • [28] Effect of cyclic loading on dissolution-precipitation creep
    Skvortsova, Z. N.
    Zubov, D. N.
    Muralev, A. E.
    Traskin, V. Yu.
    COLLOID JOURNAL, 2011, 73 (05) : 683 - 687
  • [29] Modelling infiltration driven reactions using experiments: Coupled dissolution-precipitation and exchange reaction between spinel grains in the presence of water
    Mueller, T.
    Dohmen, R.
    Chakraborty, S.
    GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA, 2009, 73 (13) : A915 - A915
  • [30] IMPEDANCE CALCULATION IN SIMULATED DISSOLUTION-PRECIPITATION PROCESSES
    AURIANBLAJENI, B
    TOMKIEWICZ, M
    JOURNAL OF THE ELECTROCHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1986, 133 (08) : C324 - C324