Abstract

Lyotropic liquid crystalline phases have immediate relevance in biology because of the prevalence of organized lipid structures in living systems. The incorporation of hydrophilic reagents in water domains with well-defined nanoscale geometry favors the construction of nanostructured materials of inorganics, and/or the inorganic−organic hybrids. In this paper, the lamellar mesophases composed of calcium dodecyl sulfate (CDS), n-pentanol, and ammonia (5 wt% NH3·H2O in water) were constructed and used as the precipitation media of calcium carbonate (CaCO3). Under the atmosphere of carbon dioxide gas, the occurring solid−liquid−gas reaction resulted only in rhombohedral calcite particles at the beginning, then ultimately in layer-cake aggregates of calcite and stick-bundle aggregates of aragonite. Furthermore, the aragonite content increased with the proceeding time interval of the three-phase reaction, indicating a special crystallization habit of CaCO3 in the lamellar mesophases of CDS. Aside from these, t...

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