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Two-Dimensional Crystal Growth from Undersaturated Solutions
20
Citations
27
References
2007
Year
Solid-state IonicSolid PhaseEngineeringCrystal Growth TechnologySurface ScienceApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsForeign SubstratePhysical ChemistryTwo-dimensional Crystal GrowthChemistryIonic CompoundsCrystal FormationCrystallographySolution (Chemistry)Ion StructureIon Process
The solubility of a substance is commonly understood as the minimum concentration necessary for the condensation of a solid phase from solution. Here we report the nucleation and growth of ionic compounds from aqueous concentrations on the order of 0.1 times the solubility. The condensation is catalyzed by a foreign substrate, and the new phase grows as a crystalline monolayer. Undersaturated growth is observed only in cases where the dissolved compound is isomorphic with the substrate and the interaction strength between a dissolved-ion/substrate-ion pair exceeds that between the two dissolved ions. These results are consistent with a simple model in which favorable ion-surface interactions lead to ion enrichment and supersaturation in the two-dimensional interfacial zone.
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