posted on 2023-05-18, 09:10authored byWharton, DA, Mutch, JS, Peter Wilson, Marshall, CJ, Lim, M
The construction of a simple ice nucleation spectrometer is described. It uses 10 μl droplets loaded into glass capillary tubes which are then inserted into an aluminium holder. Each holder takes six capillary tubes surrounding a central thermocouple. Four holders are placed into a cooling block, cooled by fluid from a programmable refrigerated circulator, and the thermocouples interfaced to a computer to record temperatures. Freezing of each sample is detected by an exotherm on the temperature recording, with 24 samples recorded per run. The spectrometer was tested using deionized water, an extract from a New Zealand alpine cockroach and an extract of lawn grass. The cockroach extract is estimated to contain about 103 more nucleators, active at -5°C, than the grass extract.
History
Publication title
Cryoletters
Volume
25
Issue
5
Pagination
335-340
ISSN
0143-2044
Department/School
College Office - College of Health and Medicine
Publisher
Cryo Letters
Place of publication
C/O Royal Veterinary College, Royal College St, London, England, Nw1 0Tu