Login / Signup

New Insights into Calcite Dissolution Mechanisms under Water, Proton, or Carbonic Acid-Dominated Conditions.

Kyung Tae KimGraeme A HenkelmanLynn E KatzCharles J Werth
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2024)
Carbonate minerals are ubiquitous in nature, and their dissolution impacts many environmentally relevant processes including preferential flow during geological carbon sequestration, pH buffering with climate-change induced ocean acidification, and organic carbon bioavailability in melting permafrost. In this study, we advance the atomic level understanding of calcite dissolution mechanisms to improve our ability to predict this complex process. We performed high pressure and temperature (1300 psi and 50 °C) batch experiments to measure transient dissolution of freshly cleaved calcite under H 2 O, H + , and H 2 CO 3 -dominated conditions, without and with an inhibitory anionic surfactant present. Before and after dissolution experiments, we measured dissolution etch-pit geometries using laser profilometry, and we used density functional theory to investigate relative adsorption energies of competing species that affect dissolution. Our results support the hypothesis that calcite dissolution is controlled by the ability of H 2 O to preferentially adsorb to surface Ca atoms over competing species, even when dissolution is dominated by H + or H 2 CO 3 . More importantly, we identify for the first time that adsorbed H + enhances the role of water by weakening surface Ca-O bonds. We also identify that H 2 CO 3 undergoes dissociative adsorption resulting in adsorbed HCO 3 - and H + . Adsorbed HCO 3 - that competes with H 2 O for Ca acute edge sites inhibits dissolution, while adsorbed H + at the neighboring surface of CO 3 enhances dissolution. The net effect of the dissociative adsorption of H 2 CO 3 is enhanced dissolution. These results will impact future efforts to more accurately model the impact of solutes in complex water matrices on carbonate mineral dissolution.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • density functional theory
  • risk assessment
  • oxidative stress
  • protein kinase
  • brain injury
  • human health