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Effect of common cryoprotectants on critical warming rates and ice formation in aqueous solutions

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)

Author

J.B. Hopkins
R. Badeau
M. Warkentin
R.E. Thorne

Abstract

Ice formation on warming is of comparable or greater importance to ice formation on cooling in determining survival of cryopreserved samples. Critical warming rates required for ice-free warming of vitrified aqueous solutions of glycerol, dimethyl sulfoxide, ethylene glycol, polyethylene glycol 200 and sucrose have been measured for warming rates of order 10-104K/s. Critical warming rates are typically one to three orders of magnitude larger than critical cooling rates. Warming rates vary strongly with cooling rates, perhaps due to the presence of small ice fractions in nominally vitrified samples. Critical warming and cooling rate data spanning orders of magnitude in rates provide rigorous tests of ice nucleation and growth models and their assumed input parameters. Current models with current best estimates for input parameters provide a reasonable account of critical warming rates for glycerol solutions at high concentrations/low rates, but overestimate both critical warming and cooling rates by orders of magnitude at lower concentrations and larger rates. In vitrification protocols, minimizing concentrations of potentially damaging cryoprotectants while minimizing ice formation will require ultrafast warming rates, as well as fast cooling rates to minimize the required warming rates. © 2012 Elsevier Inc.

Date Published

Journal

Cryobiology

Volume

65

Issue

3

Number of Pages

169-178,

URL

https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84869198808&doi=10.1016%2fj.cryobiol.2012.05.010&partnerID=40&md5=ecf1591f2f4b7f058f433065de6232a9

DOI

10.1016/j.cryobiol.2012.05.010

Group (Lab)

Robert Thorne Group

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