A facile ligand-free route to calcium carbonate superstructures†
Abstract
Shape control has been achievable in a wide range of mesoscale materials, while for calcium carbonate (CaCO3) which has relatively low dispersibility, limited ligand-binding ability and therefore unmanageable growth profile, the success is currently limited. Herein, the inherent transition behavior of CaCO3 from nanoparticles to microscale superstructures in response to changes in solvent dispersibility has been successfully captured. The transition was slow enough to enable the obtaining of superparticles with several well-defined morphologies, including rod, dumbbell, and double-semisphere shapes. The presence of a suitable amount of water in the ethanol reaction solution was vital to trigger the transition, allowing the primary nanoparticles to take a fragmentation/disolution-assembly/recrystallization route to form superparticles. No organic ligand is needed, enabling large-scale manufacturing of “pure” (ligand-free) superstructures at low cost. The transition is robust with a high tolerance to the addition of small molecules. Doxorubicin-incorporated superparticles afforded sustained drug release and significant suppression of MCF-7 tumor cells, while the drug-free particles were highly biocompatible. These results not only provide insights into the intrinsic evolution processes and basic driving forces of the spherulite growth of CaCO3, but also lay a foundation for localized drug delivery based on mineral materials.