Surface Forces Apparatus Measurements of Interactions between Rough and Reactive Calcite Surfaces
Joanna Dziadkowiec, Shaghayegh Javadi, Jon E. Bratvold, Ola Nilsen,, Anja R{\o}yne

TL;DR
This study investigates nm-scale forces and surface recrystallization effects between calcite surfaces in water using the Surface Forces Apparatus, revealing how surface roughness and reactivity influence interfacial forces relevant to carbonate rocks.
Contribution
It provides new insights into calcite surface interactions in water, highlighting the role of surface roughness and recrystallization in force behavior and reactivity at the nanoscale.
Findings
Repulsive forces in calcite-calcite in water are related to hydration and roughness.
Adhesion forces depend on surface smoothness and electrostatic effects.
Surface roughening occurs mainly on smooth calcite films, affecting force and reactivity.
Abstract
Nm-range forces acting between calcite surfaces in water affect macroscopic properties of carbonate rocks and calcite-based granular materials, and are significantly influenced by calcite surface recrystallization. We suggest that the repulsive mechanical effects related to nm-scale surface recrystallization of calcite in water could be partially responsible for the observed decrease of cohesion in calcitic rocks saturated with water. Using the Surface Forces Apparatus (SFA), we simultaneously followed the calcite reactivity and measured the forces in water in two surface configurations: between two rough calcite surfaces (CC), or between rough calcite and a smooth mica surface (CM). We used nm-scale rough, polycrystalline calcite films prepared by Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD). We measured only repulsive forces in CC in CaCO-saturated water, which was related to hydration effects…
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