Cluster-mediated stop-and-go crystallization
Metadatos
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Elsevier
Materia
Cluster-mediated growth Impurities In situ observation step dynamics Kinetic Monte Carlo Dead zone Biocrystallization
Fecha
2022-12Referencia bibliográfica
A.E.S. Van Driessche et al. Cluster-mediated stop-and-go crystallization. Journal of Crystal Growth 603 (2023) 127024[https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcrysgro.2022.127024]
Patrocinador
The European Space Agency under Contract No. ESA AO-2004-070, FWO grant 1523115 N (Belgium); Scholarship BES⋅2003⋅2191 (AVD, Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnologia, Spain).Resumen
Impurities control the formation of bio-crystals and can fully paralyze crystal growth at low levels of supersaturation.
Traditional impurity models predict that an escape from this so-called “dead zone” requires an increase
in the driving force (i.e. supersaturation). In this work, using protein crystals as a model system, we uncover an
alternative escape route from the dead zone that does not involve an increase in supersaturation. We demonstrate
that the merger of a protein cluster with the crystal surface triggers the formation of an ordered multi-layered
island. The newly created surface on top of the resulting 3D island is initially devoid of impurities and therefore
characterized by near-pure step growth kinetics. The accelerated step advancement on this relatively uncontaminated
surface limits the available time for impurities to adsorb on the emerging terraces and by extension
their resulting surface density. Cluster-mediated crystal growth occurring in heterogeneous media can therefore
lead to stop-and-go dynamics, which offers a new model to explain crystallization taking place under biological
control (e.g. biomineralization).