In Situ Observation of Biotite Dissolution at pH 1 Using Advanced Optical Microscopy
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/111150DOI: 10.1021/cg400285a
ISSN: 1528-7505
ISSN: 1528-7483
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Cappelli, Chiara; Van Driessche, Alexander E. S.; Cama, Jordi; Huertas Delgado, Francisco JavierEditorial
American Chemical Society
Fecha
2013-05-29Referencia bibliográfica
Cappelli, C.; Van Driessche, A. E. S.; Cama, J. y Huertas Delgado, F. J. (2013). In Situ Observation of Biotite Dissolution at pH 1 Using Advanced Optical Microscopy. Crystal Growth & Design, 13, 7, pp. 2880–2886. https://doi.org/10.1021/cg400285a
Patrocinador
Plan Nacional I+D and EU (CGL2008-01652 and CGL2011-22567); Consolider-Ingenio 2010 projectResumen
Laser confocal microscopy with differential interference contrast microscopy (LCM-DIM) was used to study in situ the biotite (001) basal surface dissolution performing long-term flow-through experiments at pH 1 (T = 11.5−70 °C). Time-lapse image sequences of large areas (up to 1 mm) of the evolving cleavage (001) surface showed that dissolution only occurs at surface edges. In addition, in contrast to an observed rapid dissolution at low steps (few layers), swelling and contraction of the edge layers occurred at high steps (many layers). An increase in temperature enhanced the surface edge dissolution from 7.5 × 10−4 μm s−1 at 11.5 °C to 6.2 × 10−2 μm s−1 at 70 °C. The results obtained in this work demonstrate that LCM-DIM is a powerful technique to study in situ the dissolution mechanism and kinetics of phyllosilicates.




