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Stable Amorphous Calcium Carbonate: Crystallization Behaviour and Stable Isotopes

Abstract
Amorphous Calcium Carbonate (ACC) is a naturally occurring amorphous form of the widely distributed mineral calcium carbonate (CaCO3). ACC has been found increasingly as a precursor phase, calcium storage site, or strengthening structural phase in a wide array of different biomineralizing organisms. An accurate understanding of the widely used classic carbonate-water paleothermometry relies on formation of CaCO3 minerals and associated oxygen isotope effects. Moreover, ACC has oft been pointed to as a possible reason for non-equilibrium isotope effects, also called vital effects, in biogenic carbonates. It is, therefore, vital to understand whether ACC can reach equilibrium with its surrounding solution, as well as the role of ACC precursors in the isotopic composition and evolution of the final crystalline phase they transform into. This study is designed to answer these questions through the precipitation of stable ACC by two methods, the alkaline method (AM) which utilizes high pH to precipitate ACC, and the silica method (SM) which envelopes precipitating ACC particles in silica vesicles to prevent crystallization. These differently precipitated ACCs are then subjected to several different experimental treatments. This is achieved by monitoring the crystallization by X-ray Diffraction (XRD), and isotopic evolution of the ACC precipitates by Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometry (IRMS) as they age and concurrently crystallize in parent solution, or in 18O enriched re-equilibration solution.
This research indicated a marked difference in the crystallization behaviour, isotopic composition, and isotopic evolution of ACC produced by these two precipitation methods. With the AM method, ACC precipitates (AM-ACC) crystallized more predictably to calcite and maintained δ18O signatures that were slightly lower than the equilibrium CO32- and resisted further isotopic exchange with surrounding solution. We propose that the former is mostly due to an incomplete DIC-water oxygen isotope equilibrium prior to the AM-ACC precipitation and the latter is a result of the high pH of the precipitating solution decreasing the solubility of the precipitated ACC phase, disallowing isotope exchange, and favouring crystallization by solid-state transformation. Conversely, while ACC precipitated using the SM (SM-ACC) yielded much more variable results, both in terms of mineralogical identity upon crystallization, and δ18O values. Isotopic results were much closer to the expected equilibrium δ18O value for calcite, hinting at an expedited oxygen isotope exchange between SM-ACC and parent solution. Furthermore, SM-ACC was capable of isotopic exchange with the 18O enriched re-equilibration solution, a feat corresponding AM-ACC was incapable of. Overall, our experimental results gleaned here that precipitation method or precipitation environment play a critical role in the isotopic evolution of precursor ACC to crystalline CaCO3, suggesting ACC as an important source of the vital effect. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/27473
Date January 2022
CreatorsAllan, Katherine
ContributorsKim, Sang-Tae, Geochemistry
Source SetsMcMaster University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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