Ice Formation on Kaolinite: Insights from Molecular Dynamics Simulations
Gabriele C. Sosso, Gareth A. Tribello, Andrea Zen, Philipp Pedevilla,, Angelos Michaelides

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to explore how kaolinite clay influences ice formation, revealing that surface relaxation critically affects nucleation processes and the resulting ice structure.
Contribution
It demonstrates that surface relaxation of kaolinite significantly impacts heterogeneous ice nucleation and the formation of hexagonal ice, providing molecular-level insights into the process.
Findings
Ice nucleation on kaolinite proceeds via hexagonal ice formation.
Surface relaxation dramatically influences kaolinite's nucleation ability.
Critical nucleus size is smaller than in homogeneous nucleation.
Abstract
The formation of ice affects many aspects of our everyday life as well as technologies such as cryotherapy and cryopreservation. Foreign substances almost always aid water freezing through heterogeneous ice nucleation, but the molecular details of this process remain largely unknown. In fact, insight into the microscopic mechanism of ice formation on different substrates is difficult to obtain even via state-of-the-art experimental techniques. At the same time, atomistic simulations of heterogeneous ice nucleation frequently face extraordinary challenges due to the complexity of the water-substrate interaction and the long timescales that characterize nucleation events. Here, we have investigated several aspects of molecular dynamics simulations of heterogeneous ice nucleation considering as a prototypical ice nucleating material the clay mineral kaolinite, which is of relevance in…
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