Transport-limited Growth of Coccolith Crystals.
Emanuel M AvrahamiZohar EyalNeta VarsanoIevgeniia ZagoriyJulia MahamidAssaf GalPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2023)
Biogenic crystals present a variety of complex morphologies that form with exquisite fidelity. In the case of the intricate morphologies of coccoliths, calcite crystals produced by marine algae, only a single set of crystallographic facets is utilized. It is unclear which growth process can merge this simple crystallographic habit with the species-specific architectures. Here, we use a suite of state-of-the-art electron microscopies to follow both the growth trajectories of the crystals ex situ, and the cellular environment in situ, in the species Emiliania huxleyi. We show that crystal growth alternates between a space filling and a skeletonized growth mode, where the crystals elongate via their stable crystallographic facets, but the final morphology is a manifestation of growth arrest. This process is reminiscent of the balance between reaction-limited and transport-limited growth regimes underlying snowflake formation. We suggest that localized ion transport regulates the kinetic instabilities that are required for transport-limited growth, leading to reproducible morphologies. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.