细菌对生物诱导碳酸钙形成的作用:液滴微流体实验的启示

Jinxuan Zhang, Yang Xiao, Hanlong Liu, Jian Chu
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摘要

微生物诱导碳酸钙沉淀 (MICP) 已成为解决岩土工程问题的一种有前途的方法。然而,人们对细菌在碳酸钙(CaCO3)形成过程中的作用仍不甚了解。本研究开发了一种液滴微流控芯片,用于观察单晶尺度下不同细菌密度条件下 CaCO3 的生长过程和 MICP 过程中的细菌行为。然后利用扫描电子显微镜(SEM)分析 CaCO3 的形态,并利用拉曼光谱鉴定 CaCO3 的多晶型。微空间内的成核显示出随机性。在形成晶体的液滴中,所有晶体都表现为立方体方解石。细菌密度越高,形成的晶体越大,形状越不规则,晶体大小与脲酶活性有显著相关性。在没有形成晶体的液滴中,较高的细菌密度和尿素酶活性会导致无定形碳酸钙(ACC)在细菌表面沉淀。然而,这种沉淀模式不同于单晶 CaCO3 的形成。我们的研究结果表明,细菌在 MICP 过程中主要作为尿素酶分泌者调节晶体生长,而它们作为晶体成核场所的作用仍存在争议。这项研究为了解生物诱导 CaCO3 的形成机制提供了新的视角。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Role of bacteria on bio-induced calcium carbonate formation: insights from droplet microfluidic experiments
Microbially induced calcium carbonate precipitation (MICP) has emerged as a promising solution for geotechnical issues. However, the role of bacteria in the formation of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) remains incompletely comprehended. In this study, a droplet microfluidic chip was developed to observe the growth process of CaCO3 and bacterial behavior during the MICP process under various bacterial density conditions at the monocrystal-scale. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) was then utilized to analyze the CaCO3 morphology, and Raman spectroscopy was employed to identify CaCO3 polymorphs. Nucleation within microspaces showed a stochastic nature. Within the droplets where crystals formed, all crystals manifested as cubic calcite. Higher bacterial density led to the formation of larger and more irregularly shaped crystals, with crystal size showing a significant correlation with urease activity. In droplets where no crystals formed, higher bacterial density and urease activity resulted in the precipitation of amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) on the bacterial surface. However, this precipitation pattern differed from the formation of monocrystalline CaCO3. Our results demonstrate that bacteria act primarily as urease secretors to regulate crystal growth during the MICP process, while their role as nucleation sites for crystals remains controversial. This study provides a novel insight into understanding the bio-induced CaCO3 formation mechanism.
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