The physicochemical properties of a (nano)mineral are strongly affected by its formation processes, and thus, may indicate the
(nano)mineral’s formation environment and mechanism. This correlation, although relevant to a myriad of geological, environmental,
and material-science processes, has not yet been fully appreciated and systematically explored. Here, using the Zn–S system,
we demonstrate that biological and abiotic processes at similar experimental conditions can produce distinctive particle size,
morphology, and crystal structure in the formed ZnS. Specifically, bacterial sulfate reduction led to the formation of highlydefective
nanocrystals of mixed sphalerite and wurtzite in a range of 4–12 nm. By comparison, the abiotic procedures of
titration- or diffusion-controlled precipitation resulted in the formation of polycrystalline aggregates that contained
randomly-oriented, ultrafine crystals below 2–3 nm. The poor crystallinity in the abiogenic samples, regardless of the sulfide
addition rates, reveals an overall nucleation-dominated, crystal growth-restricted pathway for the formation of ZnS from lowtemperature
aqueous solutions. The difficulty in the ZnS crystallization likely stems from the intrinsic surface instability of the
ZnS growth units (i.e., in the form of nanoclusters) resulting from the dipole–dipole interactions of the unit with surrounding
water molecules. In the biogenic samples, the ZnS crystallinity was significantly improved, indicating that the presence of bacterial
metabolites somehow promoted the crystallization process. With evidence for the enlarged {111} planes in the biogenic
nanocrystals, we attribute this enhancement mainly to the selective interaction of the bacterial metabolites with polar faces of
the ZnS growth units, which might have effectively screened the dipole moments in the growth units and enabled their crystallographic
assembly. By revealing the intrinsic difficulty and specific pathways for the ZnS crystallization, we also present viable
explanations for the exclusive occurrence of structural defects in {111} planes of the biogenic nanocrystals. The findings of our
study provide insight into the origin and fate of metal sulfide nanoparticles in the environment, and have implications for biomineralization,
bioremediation of metal-contaminated sites, and bacterial production of functional nanomaterials.
Revised: December 15, 2020 |
Published: May 1, 2016
Citation
Xu J., M. Murayama, C.M. Roco, H. Veeramani, F.M. Michel, J.D. Rimstidt, and C. Winkler, et al. 2016.Highly-defective nanocrystals of ZnS formed via dissimilatory bacterial sulfate reduction: A comparative study with their abiogenic analogues.Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 180.PNNL-SA-120162.doi:10.1016/j.gca.2016.02.007