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Abstract
Since Pasteur first successfully separated right-handed and left-handed tartrate crystals in 1848, the understanding of how homochirality is achieved from enantiomeric mixtures has long been incomplete. Here, we report on a chirality dominance effect where organized, three-dimensional homochiral suprastructures of the biomineral calcium carbonate (vaterite) can be induced from a mixed nonracemic amino acid system. Right-handed (counterclockwise) homochiral vaterite helicoids are induced when the amino acid l-Asp is in the majority, whereas left-handed (clockwise) homochiral morphology is induced when d-Asp is in the majority. Unexpectedly, the Asp that incorporates into the homochiral vaterite helicoids maintains the same enantiomer ratio as that of the initial growth solution, thus showing chirality transfer without chirality amplification. Changes in the degree of chirality of the vaterite helicoids are postulated to result from the extent of majority enantiomer assembly on the mineral surface. These mechanistic insights potentially have major implications for high-level advanced materials synthesis.
Induction of complex homochiral architectures by chiral transformation in a mixed enantiomer system has remained largely elusive. Here, the authors report a chirality dominance effect which induces homochiral suprastructures of calcium carbonate by a mixed, heterochiral nonracemic amino acid enantiomer system.
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1 Tianjin University, Department of Chemistry, Tianjin Key Laboratory of Molecular Optoelectronic Sciences, and Tianjin Collaborative Innovation Center of Chemical Science & Engineering, Tianjin, P. R. China (GRID:grid.33763.32) (ISNI:0000 0004 1761 2484); McGill University, Faculty of Dentistry, Montreal, Canada (GRID:grid.14709.3b) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 8649)
2 McGill University, Faculty of Dentistry, Montreal, Canada (GRID:grid.14709.3b) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 8649)
3 Shanghai Jiao Tong University, School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Shanghai, P. R. China (GRID:grid.16821.3c) (ISNI:0000 0004 0368 8293)
4 Curtin University, Curtin Institute for Computation, The Institute for Geoscience Research (TIGeR), and School of Molecular and Life Science, Perth, Australia (GRID:grid.1032.0) (ISNI:0000 0004 0375 4078)
5 Tianjin University, Tianjin Key Laboratory of Low Dimensional Materials Physics and Preparation Technology, School of Science, Tianjin, P. R. China (GRID:grid.33763.32) (ISNI:0000 0004 1761 2484)
6 Tianjin University, Department of Chemistry, Tianjin Key Laboratory of Molecular Optoelectronic Sciences, and Tianjin Collaborative Innovation Center of Chemical Science & Engineering, Tianjin, P. R. China (GRID:grid.33763.32) (ISNI:0000 0004 1761 2484)
7 McGill University, Faculty of Dentistry, Montreal, Canada (GRID:grid.14709.3b) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 8649); McGill University, Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Montreal, Canada (GRID:grid.14709.3b) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 8649)