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Iron oxides occur ubiquitously in environmental, geological, planetary, and technological settings. They exist in a rich variety of structures and hydration states. They are commonly fine-grained (nanophase) and poorly crystalline. This review summarizes recently measured thermodynamic data on their formation and surface energies. These data are essential for calculating the thermodynamic stability fields of the various iron oxide and oxyhydroxide phases and understanding their occurrence in natural and anthropogenic environments. The competition between surface enthalpy and the energetics of phase transformation leads to the general conclusion that polymorphs metastable as micrometer-sized or larger crystals can often be thermodynamically stabilized at the nanoscale. Such size-driven crossovers in stability help to explain patterns of occurrence of different iron oxides in nature.
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Alexandra Navrotsky
Arizona State University
Lena Mazeina
United States Naval Research Laboratory
Juraj Majzlan
Friedrich Schiller University Jena
Science
University of Freiburg
United States Naval Research Laboratory
Nanomaterials Research (United States)
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Navrotsky et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a16c37725571367076b87d5 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1148614