Phenomena at the advancing ice–liquid interface: solutes, particles and biological cells
- 1 May 1988
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics
- Vol. 21 (2) , 229-298
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0033583500004303
Abstract
Ice formation in aqueous solutions and suspensions involves a number of significant changes and processes in the residual liquid. The resulting effects were described concerning the redistribution of dissolved salts, the behaviour of gaseous solutes and bubble formation, the rejection and entrapment of second-phase particles. This set of conditions is also experienced by biological cells subjected to freezing. The influences of ice formation in that respect and their relevance for cryopreservation were considered as well. A model of transient heat conduction and solute diffusion with a planar ice front, propagating through a system of finite length was found to be in good agreement with measured salt concentration profiles. The spacing of the subsequently developing columnar solidification pattern was of the same order of magnitude as the pertubation wavelengths predicted from the stability criterion. Non-planar solidification of binary salt solutions was described by a pure heat transfer model under the assumption of local thermodynamic equilibrium. The rejection of gaseous solutes and the resulting gas concentration profile ahead of a planar ice front has been estimated by means of a test bubble method, yielding a distribution coefficient of 0.05 for oxygen. The nucleation of gas bubbles has been observed to occur at slightly less than 20-fold supersaturation. The subsequent radial growth of the bubbles obeys a square-root time dependence as expected from a diffusion controlled model until the still expanding bubbles become engulfed by the advancing ice-liquid interface. The maximum bubble radii decrease for increasing ice front velocities. The transition between repulsion and entrapment of spherical latex particles by an advancing planar ice-front has been characterized by a critical value of the velocity of the solidification interface. The critical velocity is inversely proportional to the particle radius as suggested by models assuming an undisturbed ice front. The increase of the critical velocity for increasing thermal gradients shows good agreement with a theoretically predicted square-root type of dependence. Critical velocities have also been measured for yeast and red blood cells. The effect of freezing on biological cells has been analyzed for human lymphocytes and erythrocytes. The reduction of cell volume observed during non-planar freezing agrees reasonably well with shrinkage curves calculated from a water transport model. The probability of intracellular ice formation has been characterized by threshold cooling rates above which the amount of water remaining within the cell is sufficient for crystallization.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)Keywords
This publication has 144 references indexed in Scilit:
- On morphological stability of planar phase boundaries during unidirectional transient solidification of binary aqueous solutionsInternational Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 1985
- Unidirectional freezing of binary aqueous solutions: an analysis of transient diffusion of heat and massInternational Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 1985
- A model for characterizing the motion of the solid-liquid interface in freezing solutionsPattern Recognition, 1984
- Solute polarization during planar freezing of aqueous salt solutionsInternational Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 1983
- Image analysis of solid-liquid interface morphology in freezing solutionsPattern Recognition, 1983
- An analysis of the heat and solute transport during solidification of an aqueous binary solution—II. Dendrite tip regionInternational Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 1982
- An analysis of the heat and solute transport during solidification of an aqueous binary solution—I. basal plane regionInternational Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 1982
- The freezing of finite domain aqueous solutions: Solute redistributionInternational Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 1981
- Generalized analytical solution for the freezing of a supercooled aqueous solution in a finite domainInternational Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 1980
- Diffusion of heat and solute during freezing of salt solutionsInternational Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, 1976