A microfluidic approach for the study of ice and clathrate hydrates crystallization.

Abstract

Summary

The present protocol describes the crystallization of microscopic ice crystals and clathrate hydrates in microfluidic devices, enabling liquid exchange around the formed crystals. This provides unparalleled possibilities to examine the crystallization process and binding mechanisms of the inhibitors.

Abstract

An accurate mechanistic description of water crystallization is challenging and requires a few key elements: superb temperature control to allow the formation of single microscopic crystals and a suitable microscopy system coupled to the cold stage. The method described herein adds another important feature that includes exchanging solutions around ice and clathrate hydrate crystals. The described system comprises a combination of unique and home-developed instruments, including microfluidics, high-resolution cold stages, and fluorescence microscopy. The cold stage was designed for microfluidic devices and allows for the formation of micron-sized ice/hydrate crystals inside microfluidic channels and the exchange of solutions around them. The temperature resolution and stability of the cold stage is one millikelvin, which is crucial for controlling the growth of these small crystals. This diverse system is used to study the different processes of ice and hydrate crystallization and the mechanism by which the growth of these crystals is inhibited. The protocol describes how to prepare microfluidic devices, how to grow and control microscopic crystals in the microfluidic channels, and how the utilization of the flow of liquids around ice/hydrate crystals affords new insights into the crystallization of water.

Description

Scholarly article / Open Access

Keywords

Ice, Microfluidics, Crystallization, Temperature, Water/chemistry

Citation

Drori, R., & Shalom, Y. (2022, Aug 18). A microfluidic approach for the study of ice and clathrate hydrates crystallization. The Journal of Visualized Experiments, 186. http://doi.org/10.3791/64072