Literature DB >> 32661539

On-chip analysis of atmospheric ice-nucleating particles in continuous flow.

Mark D Tarn1, Sebastien N F Sikora2, Grace C E Porter1, Bethany V Wyld2, Matan Alayof3, Naama Reicher3, Alexander D Harrison2, Yinon Rudich3, Jung-Uk Shim4, Benjamin J Murray2.   

Abstract

Ice-nucleating particles (INPs) are of atmospheric importance because they catalyse the freezing of supercooled cloud droplets, strongly affecting the lifetime and radiative properties of clouds. There is a need to improve our knowledge of the global distribution of INPs, their seasonal cycles and long-term trends, but our capability to make these measurements is limited. Atmospheric INP concentrations are often determined using assays involving arrays of droplets on a cold stage, but such assays are frequently limited by the number of droplets that can be analysed per experiment, often involve manual processing (e.g. pipetting of droplets), and can be susceptible to contamination. Here, we present a microfluidic platform, the LOC-NIPI (Lab-on-a-Chip Nucleation by Immersed Particle Instrument), for the generation of water-in-oil droplets and their freezing in continuous flow as they pass over a cold plate for atmospheric INP analysis. LOC-NIPI allows the user to define the number of droplets analysed by simply running the platform for as long as required. The use of small (∼100 μm diameter) droplets minimises the probability of contamination in any one droplet and therefore allows supercooling all the way down to homogeneous freezing (around -36 °C), while a temperature probe in a proxy channel provides an accurate measure of temperature without the need for temperature modelling. The platform was validated using samples of pollen extract and Snomax®, with hundreds of droplets analysed per temperature step and thousands of droplets being measured per experiment. Homogeneous freezing of purified water was studied using >10 000 droplets with temperature increments of 0.1 °C. The results were reproducible, independent of flow rate in the ranges tested, and the data compared well to conventional instrumentation and literature data. The LOC-NIPI was further benchmarked in a field campaign in the Eastern Mediterranean against other well-characterised instrumentation. The continuous flow nature of the system provides a route, with future development, to the automated monitoring of atmospheric INP at field sites around the globe.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 32661539     DOI: 10.1039/d0lc00251h

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lab Chip        ISSN: 1473-0189            Impact factor:   6.799


  4 in total

Review 1.  Studying Ice with Environmental Scanning Electron Microscopy.

Authors:  Elzbieta Pach; Albert Verdaguer
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2021-12-31       Impact factor: 4.411

2.  The role of structural order in heterogeneous ice nucleation.

Authors:  Gabriele C Sosso; Prerna Sudera; Anna T Backes; Thomas F Whale; Janine Fröhlich-Nowoisky; Mischa Bonn; Angelos Michaelides; Ellen H G Backus
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2022-04-08       Impact factor: 9.969

3.  A Microfluidic Device for Automated High Throughput Detection of Ice Nucleation of Snomax®.

Authors:  Priyatanu Roy; Margaret L House; Cari S Dutcher
Journal:  Micromachines (Basel)       Date:  2021-03-11       Impact factor: 2.891

Review 4.  Lab-on-a-Chip Platforms for Airborne Particulate Matter Applications: A Review of Current Perspectives.

Authors:  Sharon Ezrre; Marco A Reyna; Citlalli Anguiano; Roberto L Avitia; Heriberto Márquez
Journal:  Biosensors (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-24
  4 in total

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