Issue 106, 2002

Influence of alcohol on the morphology of BaSO4 crystals grown at the air–water interface

Abstract

Control over the crystallography and morphology of technologically important minerals is an important goal in the area of crystal engineering. Charged insoluble surfactant monolayers at the air–water interface (Langmuir monolayers) have proven to be popular mineralization templates. In this paper, we investigate the influence of trace quantities of alcohol (ethanol) in the aqueous subphase on the crystallography and morphology of BaSO4 crystals grown in the presence of anionic Langmuir monolayers at two largely different supersaturation ratios. It is observed that the crystals grow in the barite structure with interesting differences in morphology of the crystals grown with and without alcohol in the subphase. Preferential adsorption of ethanol molecules at the air–water interface is expected to influence not only the organization of the surfactant Langmuir monolayer but also to alter the dielectric properties of the interface and, consequently, the electrostatic binding of the ions with the Langmuir monolayer prior to mineralization.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Oct 2002
Accepted
28 Nov 2002
First published
10 Dec 2002

CrystEngComm, 2002,4, 626-630

Influence of alcohol on the morphology of BaSO4 crystals grown at the air–water interface

D. Rautaray, S. R. Sainkar, N. R. Pavaskar and M. Sastry, CrystEngComm, 2002, 4, 626 DOI: 10.1039/B210346J

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