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Precipitation of calcium carbonate and calcium phosphate under diffusion controlled mixing
Institution:1. University of Idaho, Idaho Falls, ID, United States;2. University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States;3. Montana State University, Bozeman, MT, United States;1. Institut für Theoretische Physik IV, Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf, Universitätsstrasse 1, D-40225 Düsseldorf, Germany;2. Institute for Problems of Mechanical Engineering, RAS, Bol’shoi prospect, V. O., 61, St. Petersburg, 199178, Russia;3. Institut für Theoretische Festkörperphysik, RWTH Aachen University, Templergraben 55, D-52056 Aachen, Germany;1. School of Mathematics, Statistics and Operations Research, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand;2. MACSI, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland;3. OCIAM, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK;1. Department of Gynecology, Renmin Hospital of Wuhan University, Wuhan, China;2. Central Laboratory, Renmin Hospital of Wuhan University, Wuhan, China;1. Beijing Advanced Innovation Center for Genomics, Biodynamic Optical Imaging Center, School of Life Sciences and Peking-Tsinghua Center for Life Sciences, College of Engineering, Peking University, Beijing, China;2. School of Life Sciences and Tsinghua-Peking Center for Life Sciences, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China
Abstract:Multi-component mineral precipitation in porous, subsurface environments is challenging to simulate or engineer when in situ reactant mixing is controlled by diffusion. In contrast to well-mixed systems, the conditions that favor mineral precipitation in porous media are distributed along chemical gradients, which evolve spatially due to concurrent mineral precipitation and modification of solute transport in the media. The resulting physical and chemical characteristics of a mixing/precipitation zone are a consequence of coupling between transport and chemical processes, and the distinctive properties of individual chemical systems. We examined the spatial distribution of precipitates formed in “double diffusion” columns for two chemical systems, calcium carbonate and calcium phosphate. Polyacrylamide hydrogel was used as a low permeability, high porosity medium to maximize diffusive mixing and minimize pressure- and density-driven flow between reactant solutions. In the calcium phosphate system, multiple, visually dense and narrow bands of precipitates were observed that were reminiscent of previously reported Liesegang patterns. In the calcium carbonate system, wider precipitation zones characterized by more sparse distributions of precipitates and a more open channel structure were observed. In both cases, formation of precipitates inhibited, but did not necessarily eliminate, continued transport and mixing of the reactants. A reactive transport model with fully implicit coupling between diffusion, chemical speciation and precipitation kinetics, but where explicit details of nucleation processes were neglected, was able to qualitatively simulate properties of the precipitation zones. The results help to illustrate how changes in the physical properties of a precipitation zone depend on coupling between diffusion-controlled reactant mixing and chemistry-specific details of precipitation kinetics.
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