EFFECTS OF A POLYMERIC, NONEQUILIBRIUM ANTIFREEZE UPON ICE GROWTH FROM WATER

Citation
Ca. Knight et Al. Devries, EFFECTS OF A POLYMERIC, NONEQUILIBRIUM ANTIFREEZE UPON ICE GROWTH FROM WATER, Journal of crystal growth, 143(3-4), 1994, pp. 301-310
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Crystallography
Journal title
ISSN journal
00220248
Volume
143
Issue
3-4
Year of publication
1994
Pages
301 - 310
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-0248(1994)143:3-4<301:EOAPNA>2.0.ZU;2-U
Abstract
Antifreeze glycopeptides (AFGPs) that adsorb to ice from liquid water solution and prevent ice crystal growth over a range of supercooling a re found in the blood of some Antarctic fish. They are polymers with f rom four to about 52 monomer units. The shortest, with four and five o f the repeating units, adsorb at prism-face orientations, (10 $($) ove r bar$$ 10), aligned normal to the c-axis. The adsorption plane of the longer ones is (41 $($) over bar$$ 50) when the concentration in solu tion is low. This may be the result of the 3% misfit with the ice stru cture, producing a bond strain that increases with increasing length o f adsorbed AFGP. Jogs to an adjacent plane between every five adsorbed units can explain the new orientation. However, the adsorption plane reverts gradually back to (10 $($) over bar$$ 10) with increasing conc entration in solution. This and the effects upon ice growth habit are discussed in terms of the standard conceptual model of the adsorption of polymers at solid surfaces: adsorption of segments of the molecules , with loops and tails projecting into the solution from the interface . In contrast with the shorter AFGPs, the longer ones produce a novel interface instability caused by the adsorption-inhibition of growth, t hat produces a submicroscopically fibrous growth texture at higher sol ution concentrations.