Local Light-Controlled Generation of Calcium Carbonate and Barium Carbonate Biomorphs via Photochemical Stimulation
Metadatos
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Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH
Materia
Photo-induced crystallization Calcium carbonate Biomorphs Ketoprofen Photochemistry
Fecha
2021-07-08Referencia bibliográfica
A. Menichetti... [et al.], Chem. Eur. J. 2021, 27, 12521. [10.1002/chem.202102321]
Patrocinador
European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Program (FP7/20072013)/ERC grant 340863; ERC PoC LACRYS 837874; Junta de Andalucia P18-FR-5008; German Research Foundation (DFG) CO 194/28-1; Ministry of Education, Universities and Research (MIUR); Research Projects of National Relevance (PRIN) 2017E44A9P; Projekt DEALResumen
Photochemical activation is proposed as a general
method for controlling the crystallization of sparingly
soluble carbonates in space and time. The photogeneration
of carbonate in an alkaline environment is achieved upon
photo-decarboxylation of an organic precursor by using a
conventional 365 nm UV LED. Local irradiation was conducted
focusing the LED light on a 300 μm radius spot on a
closed glass crystallization cell. The precursor solution was
optimized to avoid the precipitation of the photoreaction
organic byproducts and prevent photo-induced pH changes
to achieve the formation of calcium carbonate only in the
corresponding irradiated area. The crystallization was
monitored in real-time by time-lapse imaging. The method
is also shown to work in gels. Similarly, it was also shown to
photo-activate locally the formation of barium carbonate
biomorphs. In the last case, the morphology of these
biomimetic structures was tuned by changing the irradiation
intensity.