Towards Controlling the Growth of Silica-carbonate and Vaterite Microstructures

Spurred by lessons learnt from the ability of nature to “design” biominerals with a high degree of control over their shape, size, mineral phase and hierarchical assembly over multiple length scales, a multitude of bottom-up research strategies have been geared towards developing self-assembled inor...

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Main Author: McTaggart, Alicia
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/985605/
https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/985605/1/McTaggart_MSc_F2019.pdf
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spelling ftconcordiauniv:oai:https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca:985605 2023-05-15T17:14:11+02:00 Towards Controlling the Growth of Silica-carbonate and Vaterite Microstructures McTaggart, Alicia 2019-07-04 text https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/985605/ https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/985605/1/McTaggart_MSc_F2019.pdf en eng https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/985605/1/McTaggart_MSc_F2019.pdf McTaggart, Alicia (2019) Towards Controlling the Growth of Silica-carbonate and Vaterite Microstructures. Masters thesis, Concordia University. term_access Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2019 ftconcordiauniv 2022-05-28T19:03:37Z Spurred by lessons learnt from the ability of nature to “design” biominerals with a high degree of control over their shape, size, mineral phase and hierarchical assembly over multiple length scales, a multitude of bottom-up research strategies have been geared towards developing self-assembled inorganic materials. The self-assembly route could lead to materials with novel functionality and complexity for applications in fields such as photonics, electronics and photovoltaics. Of particular interest in our labs are biomimetic 3D nanocrystalline composite materials, characterized by long-range orientational order and highly curved surfaces. These composite materials can be synthesized from the coupled reaction of the carbonates of barium, strontium and aragonite-type calcium carbonate with silica in alkaline (pH ca. 10–12) environments under the influence of atmospheric CO2. It has been shown that the complexity of these microstructures can be enhanced under dynamic reaction-diffusion conditions. To replicate this approach, we aim to characterize the effect of changes in solution conditions (i.e. pH, CO2 concentration and temperature) on the growth, structural morphology and the hierarchical organization of silica-carbonate biomorphs. The interaction between the organic and inorganic components of biological systems leads to some of the most beautiful (and often chiral) patterns seen in nature, as demonstrated by snail shells and the chiral narwhal tusk. Attempts to control the handedness of the helices during their formation involved the use of enantiomerically pure amino acids at the molecular level and chiral vaterite crystal templates at the mesoscale, to break the symmetry towards helices of a single handedness. Finally, we aim to show how the size and predominant morphologies of silica-carbonate microstructures was tuned as a function of concentration of Chicago Sky Blue (CSB; a sulphonated azo dye) in addition to its method of incorporation in the crystallization solution. This research also provides ... Thesis narwhal* Spectrum: Concordia University Research Repository (Montreal)
institution Open Polar
collection Spectrum: Concordia University Research Repository (Montreal)
op_collection_id ftconcordiauniv
language English
description Spurred by lessons learnt from the ability of nature to “design” biominerals with a high degree of control over their shape, size, mineral phase and hierarchical assembly over multiple length scales, a multitude of bottom-up research strategies have been geared towards developing self-assembled inorganic materials. The self-assembly route could lead to materials with novel functionality and complexity for applications in fields such as photonics, electronics and photovoltaics. Of particular interest in our labs are biomimetic 3D nanocrystalline composite materials, characterized by long-range orientational order and highly curved surfaces. These composite materials can be synthesized from the coupled reaction of the carbonates of barium, strontium and aragonite-type calcium carbonate with silica in alkaline (pH ca. 10–12) environments under the influence of atmospheric CO2. It has been shown that the complexity of these microstructures can be enhanced under dynamic reaction-diffusion conditions. To replicate this approach, we aim to characterize the effect of changes in solution conditions (i.e. pH, CO2 concentration and temperature) on the growth, structural morphology and the hierarchical organization of silica-carbonate biomorphs. The interaction between the organic and inorganic components of biological systems leads to some of the most beautiful (and often chiral) patterns seen in nature, as demonstrated by snail shells and the chiral narwhal tusk. Attempts to control the handedness of the helices during their formation involved the use of enantiomerically pure amino acids at the molecular level and chiral vaterite crystal templates at the mesoscale, to break the symmetry towards helices of a single handedness. Finally, we aim to show how the size and predominant morphologies of silica-carbonate microstructures was tuned as a function of concentration of Chicago Sky Blue (CSB; a sulphonated azo dye) in addition to its method of incorporation in the crystallization solution. This research also provides ...
format Thesis
author McTaggart, Alicia
spellingShingle McTaggart, Alicia
Towards Controlling the Growth of Silica-carbonate and Vaterite Microstructures
author_facet McTaggart, Alicia
author_sort McTaggart, Alicia
title Towards Controlling the Growth of Silica-carbonate and Vaterite Microstructures
title_short Towards Controlling the Growth of Silica-carbonate and Vaterite Microstructures
title_full Towards Controlling the Growth of Silica-carbonate and Vaterite Microstructures
title_fullStr Towards Controlling the Growth of Silica-carbonate and Vaterite Microstructures
title_full_unstemmed Towards Controlling the Growth of Silica-carbonate and Vaterite Microstructures
title_sort towards controlling the growth of silica-carbonate and vaterite microstructures
publishDate 2019
url https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/985605/
https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/985605/1/McTaggart_MSc_F2019.pdf
genre narwhal*
genre_facet narwhal*
op_relation https://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/id/eprint/985605/1/McTaggart_MSc_F2019.pdf
McTaggart, Alicia (2019) Towards Controlling the Growth of Silica-carbonate and Vaterite Microstructures. Masters thesis, Concordia University.
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