KANAZAWA, Japan, Aug. 27, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Researchers at
Nano Life Science Institute (WPI-NanoLSI), Kanazawa
University, implement modifications to their
high-speed atomic force microscopy that simultaneously improve
resolution and speed, while enabling direct measurements of 3D
structures to provide conclusive evidence of a contested hydration
layer forming as calcite dissolves.
Understanding the dissolution processes of minerals can provide
key insights into geochemical processes. Attempts to explain some
of the observations during the dissolution of calcite
(CaCO3) have led to the hypothesis that a hydration
layer forms, although this has been contested. Hydration layers are
also important as they play a role in a number of processes
including adhesion, corrosion and wetting, as well as the folding,
stability and recognition of proteins. Now researchers led by
Kazuki Miyata, Adam S. Foster and Takeshi Fukuma at the
Nano Life Science Institute (WPI-Nano LSI) at Kanazawa University
in Japan have successfully
upgraded their atomic force microscope to retrieve imaging data
with the time and spatial resolution needed to obtain 3D structure
images that provide direct evidence of a hydration layer forming
during the dissolution of calcite.
The hypothesis of a hydration layer forming during the
dissolution of calcite was prompted by simulations of the process,
which pointed to the production of a Ca(OH)2 layer
across 'transition regions' as calcite dissolves. Despite being
unstable in the bulk or on flat terraces, Ca(OH)2 can
appropriate some stability from step edge structures, although the
mechanism behind this is not well understood. This could explain
the stability of the Ca(OH)2 next to the step edges but
since the transition regions observed in experiments span several
nanometres, the authors had posited the possibility that the
Ca(OH)2 acquires its stability through indirect
interactions with the step by means of a hydration structure.
However, as the researchers point out in their report, hydration
effects remain 'poorly understood' as techniques for imaging
changes in solid–liquid interfacial structures are lacking.
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) obtains high resolution images by
using a nanoscale cantilever to feel the surface a little like the
needle of a record player feels out the grooves in vinyl. However,
despite a huge step change in the rate of image acquisition that
can be achieved with the invention of high-speed (HS) AFM, AFM has
still suffered a little from a trade-off between speed and spatial
resolution. Efforts to apply it to study dissolution processes is
also hampered because the tool is designed to scan the topologies
and interactions across 2D surfaces, and dissolution of minerals
involves 3D structural changes.
Previous work had expedited the higher resolution 'frequency
modulated' (FM) AFM so that the image acquisition time was reduced
from a minute to just 0.5 s/frame. This upgrade allowed the authors
to image the transition region from which they inferred the
presence of a hydration layer, but some extrapolation was required
to extract 3D structure information from comparison of the 2D-AFM
data to 3D simulation, leaving some to doubt the conclusions.
Modifications of AFM to extract 3D force data using AFM have
previously been demonstrated, although once again despite some
improvements to speed things up, to around 1 minute/frame the image
acquisition time remained prohibitive for observing dynamic
processes.
The authors get around all these drawbacks by combining the
HS-FM-AFM with 3D-SFM. This involved increasing the bandwidth of
their 3D-SFM while maintaining a force resolution of 10-100nN, fast
synchronization of the signals in the lateral scanning and
3rd dimension, and fast recording of the cantilever
frequency shifts. With these in place the researchers were able to
capture 3D-SFM images in just 1.6 s/frame. They used the approach
to image the dissolution of calcite.
"The HS-3D-SFM images produced in the present work clearly show
the 3D distribution predicted by the simulations, thus supporting
the existence of an extended hydration layer," they point out in
their report.
Images
https://nanolsi.kanazawa-u.ac.jp/wp/wp-content/uploads/fig_en_1.png
Fig. 1: High-speed 3D-SFM imaging
(a) Imaging principle of 3D-SFM, where the distribution in
three-dimensional space can be measured by scanning the AFM tip
horizontally and vertically. The grey spheres represent individual
atoms constituting the tip. (b) 3D-SFM images obtained near the
calcite step edge during its dissolution at 5 s / 3D image. The
water distribution on the terraces and transition region is
obtained, with clearly different structures in them. (c) Another
example of a 3D-SFM image obtained at 1.6 s/3D image. (d) Vertical
cross-sectional image obtained over the terrace and transition
region. The thickness of the respective hydration structures (dark
orange areas) can be seen. The top edge of the respective hydration
structure in the upper terrace and transition region is
approximately the same height (arrow (1)), while the position of
this top edge is significantly lower in the lower region (arrow
(2)). This suggests that the extended hydration layer is formed at
arrow (1). (e) Classical molecular dynamics simulation. This
indicates that the water in the upper terrace and transition region
is at the same height, consistent with the results in (d).
https://nanolsi.kanazawa-u.ac.jp/wp/wp-content/uploads/fig_en_2.png
Fig.2 A model of the formation and stabilisation mechanism of
the transition region.
Waters in the hydration layer above the upper terrace and
transition zone are hydrogen bonded to each other and form a
network. This extended hydrogen bonding network would be
energetically favored, and Ca(OH)2 does not desorb from the surface
because it is inhibited by this network. However, the energetic
favorability of this extended layer would decrease as the distance
from the step edge increases. Finally, Ca(OH) 2 desorbs at a point
where its energy to desorb exceeds that of the Ca(OH)2. Finally,
Ca(OH)2 desorbs at a point where the energy at which it attempts to
desorb exceeds the energy of network stabilisation.
© 2024 Miyata et al., Nano
Letters
Glossary
AFM
Atomic force microscopy was first established in the mid 1980s
by Gerd Binnig, Calvin Quate and Christophe Gerber. It uses a nanoscale
cantilever with a nanoscale tip attached to it, such that
interactions between the tip and the surface result in a deflection
of the tip. Thanks to the atomically sharp end of the tip sub
nanometre resolution can be achieved.
Frequency modulated AFM
The first demonstration of AFM achieved a lateral resolution of
30 Å in air. A number of modifications to the initial set up helped
to improve the device. By avoiding contact with the sample, the
approach could be used to study delicate and soft materials.
Tapping mode or frequency modulated AFM helped to improve the
sensitivity of the device for certain set ups. Here the end of the
cantilever flaps up and down and the change in frequency due to the
interactions with the surface is monitored.
High-speed AFM
In 2008 Toshio Ando at Kanazawa University demonstrated how
modifications that improve the feedback bandwidth and phase
detection as well as optimizations to the cantilever could speed up
the image acquisition rate sufficiently to allow AFM movies of
dynamic processes.
AFM is better suited to imaging biological samples than the
scanning tunnelling microscope that had been developed before it
because it does not require a conducting sample. The development of
HS-AFM allowed people to use the technique to visualise molecular
processes for the first time.
Later developments helped people to speed up FM-AFM to capture
images at a rate of 0.5 s/frame too. The NanoLSI researchers used
this approach to study the dissolution of calcite previously but
they could only monitor the 2D structure change. To draw
conclusions on the 3D shape they assumed the presence of the
Ca(OH)2, calculated the 3D structure with the
Ca(OH)2 layer and a hydration layer on top, infer the
forces from that, and hence the frequency changes an AFM would
measure and the resulting 2D height map, and finally compare that
with the image obtained from 2D-FM-AFM.
3D-AFM
Further developments of 3D-AFM made it capable of monitoring the
forces acting on the tip in all three dimensions. Although
originally quite slow because of the complexity of the tip motions
involved, the NanoLSI researchers found they could speed it up by
modulating the vertical height of the tip sinusoidally while
scanning laterally.
This '3D scanning force microscopy (3D-SFM)' allowed images to
be captured at a rate of 1 minute/frame – fast enough to avoid
image distortion due to tip drift but not yet fast enough to
monitor dynamic processes, which was enabled by combining 3D-AFM
with HS-FM-AFM. This allowed direct monitoring of dynamic 3D
structure changes.
Reference
Kazuki Miyata, Kosuke Adachi, Naoyuki Miyashita, Keisuke Miyazawa, Adam
S. Foster, and Takeshi
Fukuma. High-speed three-dimensional scanning force
microscopy visualization of subnanoscale hydration structures on
dissolving calcite step edges. Published on line 26 August, 2024, Nano
Letters 2024.
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.4c02368
URL: https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.4c02368
Contact
Fujiko Imanaga (Ms)
Project Planning and Outreach
NanoLSI Administration Office, Nano Life Science Institute
(WPI-NanoLSI)
Kanazawa University
Kakuma-machi, Kanazawa 920-1192, Japan
Email: nanolsi-office@adm.kanazawa-u.ac.jp
Tel: +81 (76) 234-4555
About Nano Life Science Institute (WPI-NanoLSI), Kanazawa
University
Understanding nanoscale mechanisms of life phenomena by
exploring 'uncharted nano-realms'
Cells are the basic units of almost all life forms. We are
developing nanoprobe technologies that allow direct imaging,
analysis, and manipulation of the behavior and dynamics of
important macromolecules in living organisms, such as proteins and
nucleic acids, at the surface and interior of cells. We aim at
acquiring a fundamental understanding of the various life phenomena
at the nanoscale.
https://nanolsi.kanazawa-u.ac.jp/en/
About the World Premier International Research Center
Initiative (WPI)
The WPI program was launched in 2007 by Japan's Ministry of Education, Culture,
Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) to foster globally visible
research centers boasting the highest standards and outstanding
research environments. Numbering more than a dozen and operating at
institutions throughout the country, these centers are given a high
degree of autonomy, allowing them to engage in innovative modes of
management and research. The program is administered by the Japan
Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS).
See the latest research news from the centers at the WPI News
Portal:
https://www.eurekalert.org/newsportal/WPI
Main WPI program site:
www.jsps.go.jp/english/e-toplevel
About Kanazawa University
As the leading comprehensive university on the Sea of
Japan coast, Kanazawa University
has contributed greatly to higher education and academic research
in Japan since it was founded in
1949. The University has three colleges and 17 schools offering
courses in subjects that include medicine, computer engineering,
and humanities.
The University is located on the coast of the Sea of
Japan in Kanazawa – a city rich in
history and culture. The city of Kanazawa has a highly respected
intellectual profile since the time of the fiefdom (1598-1867).
Kanazawa University is divided into two main campuses: Kakuma and
Takaramachi for its approximately 10,200 students including 600
from overseas.
http://www.kanazawa-u.ac.jp/en/
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