Litcius/Paper detail

Interplay of vitrification and ice formation in a cryoprotectant aqueous solution at low temperature

Christiane Alba–Simionesco, Patrick Judeinstein, S. Longeville, Oriana Osta, Florence Porcher, Frédéric Caupin, Gilles Tarjus

2022Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The proneness of water to crystallize is a major obstacle to understanding its putative exotic behavior in the supercooled state. It also represents a strong practical limitation to cryopreservation of biological systems. Adding some concentration of glycerol, which has a cryoprotective effect preventing, to some degree, water crystallization, has been proposed as a possible way out, provided the concentration is small enough for water to retain some of its bulk character and/or for limiting the damage caused by glycerol on living organisms. Contrary to previous expectations, we show that, in the “marginal” glycerol molar concentration ≈ 18%, at which vitrification is possible with no crystallization on rapid cooling, water crystallizes upon isothermal annealing even below the calorimetric glass transition of the solution. Through a time-resolved polarized neutron scattering investigation, we extract key parameters, size and shape of the ice crystallites, fraction of water that crystallizes, and crystallization time, which are important for cryoprotection, as a function of the annealing temperature. We also characterize the nature of the out-of-equilibrium liquid phases that are present at low temperature, providing more arguments against the presence of an isocompositional liquid–liquid transition. Finally, we propose a rule of thumb to estimate the lower temperature limit below which water crystallization does not occur in aqueous solutions.

Topics & Concepts

CrystallizationVitrificationSupercoolingAqueous solutionCryoprotectantAnnealing (glass)Amorphous iceGlycerolChemical engineeringThermodynamicsMaterials scienceNeutron scatteringRecrystallization (geology)Ice crystalsChemistryChemical physicsCrystallographyCryopreservationScatteringOrganic chemistryPhysicsPaleontologyCell biologyAmorphous solidEngineeringNuclear physicsOpticsEmbryoBiologynanoparticles nucleation surface interactionsMaterial Dynamics and PropertiesAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics