LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Superlattice ordering transitions driven by short-range structure in barium calcium carbonates.

Photo from wikipedia

Balcite (BaxCa1-xCO3) is a synthetic analog of rhombohedral carbonate minerals like calcite and dolomite that is disordered on both the cation and anion sublattices. Here, we show that multiple exotic… Click to show full abstract

Balcite (BaxCa1-xCO3) is a synthetic analog of rhombohedral carbonate minerals like calcite and dolomite that is disordered on both the cation and anion sublattices. Here, we show that multiple exotic superlattice structures, including a dolomite analog that we call balcomite, can form from balcite at elevated temperatures. The second-order balcite-to-balcomite conversion at temperatures between 150-600 °C is driven by the preference of barium and calcium for different oxygen coordination numbers and facilitated by local carbonate reorientation. At elevated pressure, further superlattice order arises from cation segregation in all three dimensions, producing a supercell with the same R3̄m symmetry as balcite but 6× larger. This highly ordered structure relaxes back to the balcomite structure upon returning to ambient conditions. None of the three naturally occurring polymorphs of Ba0.5Ca0.5CO3 (alstonite, paralstonite, barytocalcite) formed from balcite despite being putatively energetically favored. Instead, alstonite transformed to a balcomite-like structure via a first-order process after transiently converting to a paralstonite-like structure via a second-order process. Together, these results show that high temperature transformation pathways between structures in the barium calcium carbonate system can be driven by coarsening and are facilitated by similarity in short-range order, conceptually analogous to previously described low-temperature transformations. Many of the exotic high temperature carbonate structures are unstable, but may participate in transformation pathways between naturally observed metastable mineral phases, suggesting important roles for ephemeral phases in shaping past and current mineral distributions.

Keywords: order; barium calcium; structure; short range; carbonate

Journal Title: Faraday discussions
Year Published: 2022

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.