Myriad Mapping of nanoscale minerals reveals calcium carbonate hemihydrate in forming nacre and coral biominerals

Connor A. Schmidt,Eric Tambutté, Alexander A. Venn,Zhaoyong Zou, Cristina Castillo Alvarez, Laurent S. Devriendt,Hans A. Bechtel,Cayla A. Stifler, Samantha Anglemyer, Carolyn P. Breit, Connor L. Foust, Andrii Hopanchuk, Connor N. Klaus, Isaac J. Kohler, Isabelle M. LeCloux, Jaiden Mezera, Madeline R. Patton, Annie Purisch, Virginia Quach, Jaden S. Sengkhammee, Tarak Sristy, Shreya Vattem, Evan J. Walch, Marie Albéric,Yael Politi, Peter Fratzl,Sylvie Tambutté,Pupa U.P.A. Gilbert

Nature Communications(2024)

引用 0|浏览2
暂无评分
摘要
Calcium carbonate (CaCO 3 ) is abundant on Earth, is a major component of marine biominerals and thus of sedimentary and metamorphic rocks and it plays a major role in the global carbon cycle by storing atmospheric CO 2 into solid biominerals. Six crystalline polymorphs of CaCO 3 are known—3 anhydrous: calcite, aragonite, vaterite, and 3 hydrated: ikaite (CaCO 3 ·6H 2 O), monohydrocalcite (CaCO 3 ·1H 2 O, MHC), and calcium carbonate hemihydrate (CaCO 3 ·½H 2 O, CCHH). CCHH was recently discovered and characterized, but exclusively as a synthetic material, not as a naturally occurring mineral. Here, analyzing 200 million spectra with Myriad Mapping (MM) of nanoscale mineral phases, we find CCHH and MHC, along with amorphous precursors, on freshly deposited coral skeleton and nacre surfaces, but not on sea urchin spines. Thus, biomineralization pathways are more complex and diverse than previously understood, opening new questions on isotopes and climate. Crystalline precursors are more accessible than amorphous ones to other spectroscopies and diffraction, in natural and bio-inspired materials.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要