Microbial-induced calcium carbonate precipitation An experimental toolbox for in situ and real-time investigation of micro-scale pH evolution
Concrete is the second most consumed product by humans, after water. However, the production of cement, which is used as a binding material in concrete, causes more than 5% of anthropogenic CO2 emissions and has therefore a significant contribution to climate change and global warming. Due to increasing environmental awareness and international climate goals, there is a need for emission-reduced materials, that can replace conventional concrete in certain applications. One path to produce a solid, concrete-like construction material is microbial-induced calcium carbonate precipitation (MICP). As a calcium source in MICP, crushed limestone, which mainly consists out of CaCO3, can be dissolved with acids, for example lactic acid. The pH evolution during crystallization and dissolution processes provides important information about kinetics of the reactions. However, previous research on MICP has mainly been focused on macro-scale pH evolution and on characterization of the finished material. To get a better understanding of MICP it is important to be able to follow also local pH changes in a sample. In this work we present a new method to study processes of MICP at micro-scale in situ and in real time. We present two different methods to monitor the pH changes during the precipitation process of CaCO3. In the first method, the average pHs of small sample volumes are measured in real time, and pH changes are subsequently correlated with processes in the sample by comparing to optical microscope results. The second method is introduced to follow local pH changes at a grain scale \textit{in situ} and in real time. Furthermore, local pH changes during the dissolution of CaCO3 crystals are monitored. We demonstrate that these two methods are powerful tools to investigate pH changes for both MICP precipitation and CaCO3 dissolution for knowledge-based improvement of MICP-based material properties.
SEEK ID: https://fairdomhub.org/studies/749
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Projects: BioZEment 2.0
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Experimentalists: Jennifer Zehner
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Created: 14th Apr 2020 at 11:03
Last updated: 14th Apr 2020 at 11:04
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