Natural manganese (Mn) oxide coatings, resulting from the heterogeneous nucleation on foreign substances, have garnered interest based on their importance in the reaction with organic substances and in environmental systems. However, the heterogeneous nucleation of the natural Mn oxide coatings still remains elusive. Here, via fast photochemical oxidation of Mn2+(aq), we show that Mn(IV) oxide nuclei form and aggregate on quartz in three distinct successive stages: (i) a nanocrystalline film of unaligned grain forms, (ii) nanoislands develop on the film, and (iii) nanorods form on the nanoislands. Each stage has different crystalline structures and forms by aligned attachment of nanoscale precursors on the preceding surface. Crystal lattice analyses confirm the crystalline development, from the short-range order of the Mn oxide film to the long-range order of the nanorods. Also, the heterogeneous nucleation observed in this work produced groutellite-like tunnel structures of Mn oxide on quartz. This revealed pathway of the heterogeneous nucleation can offer a new perspective on the variety of poorly crystalline structures of natural Mn oxides found in the environment, which can affect elemental redox cycles, contaminant sequestration and removal, and soil carbon storage.
Keywords: aligned attachment; heterogeneous nucleation; natural Mn oxide coating; particle aggregation; photochemical Mn oxidation; tunnel structured Mn(III/IV) oxide.