Unravelling the Origins of Ice Nucleation on Organic Crystals
Gabriele C. Sosso, Thomas F. Whale, Mark A. Holden, Philipp Pedevilla,, Benjamin J. Murray, Angelos Michaelides

TL;DR
This study combines experiments and simulations to reveal that cholesterol crystals are highly effective ice nucleators due to their surface flexibility and topography, offering new insights into organic ice nucleation mechanisms.
Contribution
It uncovers the microscopic mechanisms of ice nucleation on organic crystals, highlighting the role of surface flexibility and topography, which was previously not well understood.
Findings
Cholesterol is a more potent ice nucleator than many inorganic substrates.
Surface topography influences the range of ice nucleation temperatures.
Flexible hydrophilic surfaces form unconventional ice-templating structures.
Abstract
Organic molecules such as steroids or amino acids form crystals that can facilitate the formation of ice -- arguably the most important phase transition on earth. However, the origin of the ice nucleating ability of organic crystals is still largely unknown. Here, we combine experiments and simulations to unravel the microscopic details of ice formation on cholesterol, a prototypical organic crystal widely used in cryopreservation. We find that cholesterol -- which is also a substantial component of cell membranes -- is an ice nucleating agent more potent than many inorganic substrates, including the mineral feldspar (one of the most active ice nucleating material in the atmosphere). Scanning electron microscopy measurements reveal a variety of morphological features on the surfaces of cholesterol crystals: this suggests that the topography of the surface is key to the broad range of…
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