A simple prototype for assessing plant cold hardiness with differential thermal analysis
John R. Butnor

TL;DR
This paper introduces a simple and accessible prototype for measuring plant cold hardiness using differential thermal analysis with thermoelectric modules.
Contribution
A low-cost, easy-to-build DTA setup using a legacy datalogger and thermoelectric modules is presented.
Findings
Single-ended voltage measurements can replace multiplexers to monitor more samples.
The prototype demonstrates that DTA is accessible with basic equipment.
The setup effectively detects temperature changes during freezing of plant tissue.
Abstract
Differential thermal analysis (DTA) is a laboratory technique used to assess cold tolerance of plant tissue by detecting low temperature exotherms released when intracellular water freezes and cells are damaged. Measurements are made by placing samples on thermoelectric modules (TEMs) in a programmable freezer, slowly reducing the temperature, and detecting the latent heat of fusion released when intracellular water undergoes a phase change from liquid to solid. TEMs are solid-state Peltier devices that are commonly used for heating or cooling of electronics depending on the direction of the applied electrical current. In their quiescent state, they are very effective heat flux sensors that can be used to detect minute changes in temperature. Configurations that multiplex many TEMs for DTA have been used for several decades to assess cold tolerance, but the details of how they are…
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Taxonomy
Topicsthermodynamics and calorimetric analyses · Thermal properties of materials · Heat shock proteins research
