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      The solubility product controls the rate of calcite dissolution in pure water and seawater†

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      a , a , b , a ,
      Chemical Science
      The Royal Society of Chemistry

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          Abstract

          Quantification of calcite dissolution underpins climate and oceanographic modelling. We report the factors controlling the rate at which individual crystals of calcite dissolved. Clear, generic criteria based on the change of calcite particle dimensions measured microscopically with time are established to indicate if dissolution occurs under kinetic or thermodynamic control. The dissolution of calcite crystals into water is unambiguously revealed to be under thermodynamic control such that the rate at which the crystal dissolved is controlled by the rate of diffusion of ions from a saturated surface layer adjacent to the calcite surface. As such the dissolution rate is controlled by the true stoichiometric solubility product which is inferred from the microscopic measurement as a function of the concentration of NaCl. Comparison with accepted literature values shows that the role of ion pairing at high ionic strengths as in seawater, specifically that of CaCO 3 and other ion pairs, exerts a significant influence since these equilibria control the amount of dissolved calcium and carbonate ions in the later of solution immediately adjacent to the solid.

          Abstract

          The dissolution of calcite crystals into water is revealed to be under thermodynamic control such that the rate of dissolution is controlled by the rate of diffusion of ions from a saturated surface layer adjacent to the calcite surface.

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          Most cited references2

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          CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics

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            Understanding Voltammetry

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              Author and article information

              Journal
              Chem Sci
              Chem Sci
              SC
              CSHCBM
              Chemical Science
              The Royal Society of Chemistry
              2041-6520
              2041-6539
              10 January 2024
              14 February 2024
              10 January 2024
              : 15
              : 7
              : 2464-2472
              Affiliations
              [a ] Physical and Theoretical Chemistry Laboratory, Department of Chemistry, University of Oxford South Parks Road Oxford UK Richard.Compton@ 123456chem.ox.ac.uk
              [b ] The School of Chemistry, Trinity College Dublin, The University of Dublin. College Green Dublin 2 Ireland
              Author notes
              [‡]

              These authors contributed equally to this work.

              Author information
              https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8829-5883
              https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7276-9319
              https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9841-5041
              Article
              d3sc04063a
              10.1039/d3sc04063a
              10866361
              38362434
              ae9d52fc-424a-466c-9a91-b352fe64fb6e
              This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry
              History
              : 4 August 2023
              : 9 January 2024
              Page count
              Pages: 9
              Funding
              Funded by: Oxford Martin School, University of Oxford, doi 10.13039/501100004211;
              Award ID: Monitoring Ocean Ecosystems
              Categories
              Chemistry
              Custom metadata
              Paginated Article

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