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1.
Langmuir ; 39(31): 11090-11098, 2023 Aug 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37486722

RESUMEN

Thin water films that form by the adhesion and condensation of air moisture on minerals can initiate phase transformation reactions with broad implications in nature and technology. We here show important effects of water film coverages on reaction rates and products during the transformation of periclase (MgO) nanocubes to brucite [Mg(OH)2] nanosheets. Using vibrational spectroscopy, we found that the first minutes to hours of Mg(OH)2 growth followed first-order kinetics, with rates scaling with water loadings. Growth was tightly linked to periclase surface hydration and to the formation of a brucite precursor solid, akin to poorly stacked/dislocated nanosheets. These nanosheets were the predominant forms of Mg(OH)2 growth in the 2D-like hydration environments of sub-monolayer water films, which formed below ∼50% relative humidity (RH). From molecular simulations, we infer that reactions may have been facilitated near surface defects where sub-monolayer films preferentially accumulated. In contrast, the 3D-like hydration environment of multilayered water films promoted brucite nanoparticle formation by enhancing Mg(OH)2 nanosheet growth and stacking rates and yields. From the structural similarity of periclase and brucite to other metal (hydr)oxide minerals, this concept of contrasting nanosheet growth should even be applicable for explaining water film-driven mineralogical transformations on other related nanominerals.

2.
Environ Sci Technol ; 57(6): 2415-2422, 2023 02 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36716128

RESUMEN

Iron oxyhydroxide nanoparticle reactivity has been widely investigated, yet little is still known on how particle aggregation controls the mobility and transport of environmental compounds. Here, we examine how aggregates of goethite (α-FeOOH) nanoparticle deposited on 100-300 µm quartz particles (GagCS) alter the transport of two emerging contaminants and two naturally occurring inorganic ligands-silicates and phosphates. Bromide tracer experiments showed no water fractionation into mobile and immobile water zones in an individual goethite-coated sand (GCS) column, whereas around 10% of the total water was immobile in a GagCS column. Reactive compounds were, in contrast, considerably more mobile and affected by diffusion-limited processes. A new simulation approach coupling the mobile-immobile equation with surface complexation reactions to surface reactive sites suggests that ∼90% of the binding sites were likely within the intra-aggregate zones, and that the mass transfer between mobile and immobile fractions was the rate-limited step. The diffusion-controlled processes also affected synergetic and competitive binding, which have otherwise been observed for organic and inorganic compounds at goethite surfaces. These results thereby call for more attention on transport studies, where tracer or conservative tests are often used to describe the reactive transport of environmentally relevant molecules.


Asunto(s)
Compuestos de Hierro , Minerales , Compuestos de Hierro/química , Simulación por Computador , Difusión
3.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 25(26): 17352-17359, 2023 Jul 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37347119

RESUMEN

Water films captured in the interlayer region of birnessite (MnO2) nanosheets can play important roles in biogeochemical cycling, catalysis, energy storage, and even atmospheric water harvesting. Understanding the temperature-dependent loadings and properties of these interlayer films is crucial to comprehend birnessite reactivity when exposed to moist air and temperature gradients. Using vibrational spectroscopy we show that birnessite intercalates one water (1W) monolayer at up to ∼40 °C, but that loadings decrease by half at up to 85 °C. Our results also show that the vibrational properties of intercalated water are unaffected by temperature, implying that the hydrogen bonding network of water remains intact. Using molecular simulations, we found that the lowered water storage capacity at high temperatures cannot be explained by variations in hydrogen bond numbers or in the solvation environments of interlayer K+ ions initially present in the interlayer region. It can instead be explained by the compounded effects of larger evolved heat, as inferred from immersion energies, and by the larger temperature-driven mobility of water over that of K+ ions, which are electrostatically bound to birnessite basal oxygens. By shedding new light on the temperature-driven intercalation of water in a nanolayered mineral, this study can guide future efforts to understand the (geo)chemical reactivity of related materials in natural and technological settings.

4.
Langmuir ; 37(2): 666-674, 2021 Jan 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33404244

RESUMEN

Birnessite is a layered MnO2 mineral capable of intercalating nanometric water films in its bulk. With its variable distributions of Mn oxidation states (MnIV, MnIII, and MnII), cationic vacancies, and interlayer cationic populations, birnessite plays key roles in catalysis, energy storage solutions, and environmental (geo)chemistry. We here report the molecular controls driving the nanoscale intercalation of water in potassium-exchanged birnessite nanoparticles. From microgravimetry, vibrational spectroscopy, and X-ray diffraction, we find that birnessite intercalates no more than one monolayer of water per interlayer when exposed to water vapor at 25 °C, even near the dew point. Molecular dynamics showed that a single monolayer is an energetically favorable hydration state that consists of 1.33 water molecules per unit cell. This monolayer is stabilized by concerted potassium-water and direct water-birnessite interactions, and involves negligible water-water interactions. Using our composite adsorption-condensation-intercalation model, we predicted humidity-dependent water loadings in terms of water intercalated in the internal and adsorbed at external basal faces, the proportions of which vary with particle size. The model also accounts for additional populations condensed on and between particles. By describing the nanoscale hydration of birnessite, our work secures a path for understanding the water-driven catalytic chemistry that this important layered manganese oxide mineral can host in natural and technological settings.

5.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(38): 45055-45063, 2023 Sep 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37707796

RESUMEN

Water films formed by the adhesion and condensation of air moisture on minerals can trigger the formation of secondary minerals of great importance to nature and technology. Magnesium carbonate growth on Mg-bearing minerals is not only of great interest for CO2 capture under enhanced weathering scenarios but is also a prime system for advancing key ideas on mineral formation under nanoconfinement. To help advance ideas on water film-mediated CO2 capture, we tracked the growth of amorphous magnesium carbonate (AMC) on MgO nanocubes exposed to moist CO2 gas. AMC was identified by its characteristic vibrational spectral signature and by its lack of long-range structure by X-ray diffraction. We find that AMC (MgCO3·2.3-2.5H2O) grew in sub-monolayer (ML) to 4 ML thick water films, with formation rates and yields scaling with humidity. AMC growth was however slowed down as AMC nanocoatings blocked water films access to the reactive MgO core. Films could however be partially dissolved by exposure to thicker water films, driving AMC growth for several more hours until nanocoatings blocked the reactions again. These findings shed new light on a potentially important bottleneck for the efficient mineralization of CO2 using MgO-bearing products. Notably, this study shows how variations in the air humidity affect CO2 capture by controlling water film coverages on reactive minerals. This process is also of great interest in the study of mineral growth in nanometrically thick water films.

6.
Nanoscale ; 15(24): 10286-10294, 2023 Jun 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37194306

RESUMEN

Hydrophilic nanosized minerals exposed to air moisture host thin water films that are key drivers of reactions of interest in nature and technology. Water films can trigger irreversible mineralogical transformations, and control chemical fluxes across networks of aggregated nanomaterials. Using X-ray diffraction, vibrational spectroscopy, electron microscopy, and (micro)gravimetry, we tracked water film-driven transformations of periclase (MgO) nanocubes to brucite (Mg(OH)2) nanosheets. We show that three monolayer-thick water films first triggered the nucleation-limited growth of brucite, and that water film loadings continuously increased as newly-formed brucite nanosheets captured air moisture. Small (8 nm-wide) nanocubes were completely converted to brucite under this regime while growth on larger (32 nm-wide) nanocubes transitioned to a diffusion-limited regime when (∼0.9 nm-thick) brucite nanocoatings began hampering the flux of reactive species. We also show that intra- and inter-particle microporosity hosted a hydration network that sustained GPa-level crystallization pressures, compressing interlayer brucite spacing during growth. This was prevalent in aggregated 8 nm wide nanocubes, which formed a maze-like network of slit-shaped pores. By resolving the impact of nanocube size and microporosity on reaction yields and crystallization pressures, this work provides new insight into the study of mineralogical transformations induced by nanometric water films. Our findings can be applied to structurally related minerals important to nature and technology, as well as to advance ideas on crystal growth under nanoconfinement.


Asunto(s)
Óxido de Magnesio , Agua , Agua/química , Hidróxido de Magnesio/química , Hidroxilación , Minerales/química
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