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Morphology and stability of mineralized carbon influenced by magnesium ions.

Kung-Won ChoiYongtae AhnChan-Ung KangChul-Min ChonSubbaiah Muthu PrabhuDo-Hyeon KimYoon-Hee HaByong-Hun Jeon
Published in: Environmental science and pollution research international (2023)
Ex situ mineralization of CO 2 is a promising technology that employs Ca- and Mg-rich industrial wastes but it simultaneously produces end products. Although Mg is a major mineralization source, it can adversely impact carbonate precipitation and crystal stability during co-precipitation in combination with Ca 2+ . In this study, the effects of Mg 2+ ions on the mineralization process and its products were investigated using precipitates formed at different aqueous concentrations of Mg 2+ . The final phases of the precipitates were quantitatively evaluated at the end of each process. The alterations undergone by the calcite crystals, which constituted the dominant carbonate phase in each experiment, were analyzed using a sophisticated crystallographic approach. Aragonite was detected at high Mg 2+ concentrations (Mg 2+ /Ca 2+ ratio of 2.00), although brucite was the sole phase of the Mg crystal. The increase in Mg 2+ ion concentration induced the formation of an amorphous solid. The results revealed that a drastic transformation of the calcite lattice occurred when the ratio of Mg 2+ /Ca 2+ exceeded 1.00, agreeing with the shifts observed in the calcite structure upon comparing the precipitates formed at the Mg 2+ /Ca 2+ ratios of 1.00 and 2.00, wherein microstrain and crystallite sizes changed from 0.040 and 55.33 nm to 0.1533 and 12.35 nm, respectively. At a Mg 2+ /Ca 2+ ratio of 2.00, 6.51% of the Ca 2+ ions in the calcite structure were substituted by Mg 2+ , increasing the surface energy of the crystal and the solubility of the carbonate. Therefore, Mg 2+ is a potential hindrance that can impede the precipitation of carbonates and increase instability at certain concentrations.
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