Structure formation during freeze casting filmed

Das 3D-Tomogramm zeigt einen Querschnitt durch die erstarrte Probe, in der sich zwei Phasen voneinander getrennt haben: die Eiskristallphase in blau und die Zuckerphase in rot. Die lamellare Struktur wurde von den Eiskristallen geformt.

Das 3D-Tomogramm zeigt einen Querschnitt durch die erstarrte Probe, in der sich zwei Phasen voneinander getrennt haben: die Eiskristallphase in blau und die Zuckerphase in rot. Die lamellare Struktur wurde von den Eiskristallen geformt.

Freeze casting processes can be used to produce highly porous and hierarchically structured materials that have a large surface area. They are suitable for a wide variety of applications, as electrodes for batteries, catalyst materials or in biomedicine. A team led by Prof. Ulrike G. K. Wegst, Northeastern University, Boston, MA, USA and Dr. Francisco García Moreno from the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin have used the newly developed X-ray tomoscopy technique. At the Swiss Light Source of the Paul Scherrer Institute they observed in real time and at high resolution how the process of structure formation takes place during freezing. A sugar solution served as the model system.

Freeze-casting requires several steps. First, substances are dissolved or suspended in a solvent and then frozen in a mold with a cooling rate applied to the bottom (directional solidification). After freezing, the solid solvent phase is removed by sublimation. What remains are the previously dissolved solute molecules and suspended particles. They form the cell walls of the resulting complex, highly porous architecture.

Freeze cast materials can be used for many applications

Freeze-cast materials can be used for many applications. For instance, due to their enormous internal surface areas as battery electrodes or catalysts or because of their aligned porosity in biomedical applications for example as scaffolds for peripheral nerve repair. However, exactly how the ice templates the complex architecture during freezing, and how the desired honeycomb-like aligned porosity and the cell walls with their various surface features are formed, has remained little understood until now.

Dr Francisco García Moreno and his team at Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin have developed a method to observe these highly dynamic processes in detail. “Using X-ray tomoscopy, we can image the formation of structures in situ with high spatial and temporal resolution and even observe transient phenomena and transitional structures,” explains the physicist. Using an ultrafast turntable, intense X-rays, an extremely fast detector and software for rapid analysis of the X-ray data, the HZB team, together with colleagues at the Swiss Light Source of the Paul Scherrer Institute, studied freeze casting on a model system and demonstrated the high performance of the method. “For this study, we developed a new measuring cell with sensors to precisely record the temperature gradient,” says Dr Paul Kamm (HZB), lead author of the study. A 3D tomogram with a spatial resolution of 6 µm per second was generated. The entire freezing process was documented over 270 seconds.

Freeze casting: high performance of the method proven

Prof. Ulrike G. K. Wegst from Northeastern University, USA, had suggested an aqueous sugar solution as a polymeric model system, since this system can be simulated computationally, and because aqueous solutions still dominate the freeze casting process. “We are now able to experimentally observe for the first time the dynamics of directional ice crystal grow from the liquid phase,” says Wegst. “In doing so, the images document how instabilities form during crystal growth, how these shape the sugar phase and how characteristic, organic-looking structures are formed on the cell walls that are reminiscent of jellyfish and tentacles.” It is also interesting to note that some of these structures may disappear again.

arö

  • Copy link

You might also be interested in

  • Green hydrogen: A cage structured material transforms into a performant catalyst
    Science Highlight
    17.04.2025
    Green hydrogen: A cage structured material transforms into a performant catalyst
    Clathrates are characterised by a complex cage structure that provides space for guest ions too. Now, for the first time, a team has investigated the suitability of clathrates as catalysts for electrolytic hydrogen production with impressive results: the clathrate sample was even more efficient and robust than currently used nickel-based catalysts. They also found a reason for this enhanced performance. Measurements at BESSY II showed that the clathrates undergo structural changes during the catalytic reaction: the three-dimensional cage structure decays into ultra-thin nanosheets that allow maximum contact with active catalytic centres. The study has been published in the journal ‘Angewandte Chemie’.
  • An elegant method for the detection of single spins using photovoltage
    Science Highlight
    14.04.2025
    An elegant method for the detection of single spins using photovoltage
    Diamonds with certain optically active defects can be used as highly sensitive sensors or qubits for quantum computers, where the quantum information is stored in the electron spin state of these colour centres. However, the spin states have to be read out optically, which is often experimentally complex. Now, a team at HZB has developed an elegant method using a photo voltage to detect the individual and local spin states of these defects. This could lead to a much more compact design of quantum sensors.
  • Solar cells on moon glass for a future base on the moon
    Science Highlight
    07.04.2025
    Solar cells on moon glass for a future base on the moon
    Future settlements on the moon will need energy, which could be supplied by photovoltaics. However, launching material into space is expensive – transporting one kilogram to the moon costs one million euros. But there are also resources on the moon that can be used. A research team led by Dr. Felix Lang of the University of Potsdam and Dr. Stefan Linke of the Technical University of Berlin have now produced the required glass from ‘moon dust’ (regolith) and coated it with perovskite. This could save up to 99 percent of the weight needed to produce PV modules on the moon. The team tested the radiation tolerance of the solar cells at the proton accelerator of the HZB.