Issue 2, 2025

Witnessing a discrete microdroplet freezing event via real-time electrochemical monitoring of solution temperature

Abstract

Temperature monitoring has immediate relevance to many areas of research, from atmospheric environmental studies to biological sample and food preservation to chemical reactions. Here, we use a triple-barrel electrode to provide temperature readouts in bulk solution and microdroplets, as well as electrochemically monitor freezing events in a microdroplet. Using this method, we are able to identify distinct characteristics of a freezing aqueous droplet (supercooling, ice formation beginning and end, temperature change, and thawing) with greater temporal resolution than a standard thermocouple and without the use of microscopy. By correlating the amperometric signal change caused by alterations in the diffusion coefficient of the electrochemical system in response to temperature changes, we can calculate the instantaneous temperature at our electrode, as well as the physical behavior of ice formation and expansion. Our results suggest that these electrochemical techniques can provide real-time monitoring of the physical processes involved in aqueous temperature change and ice nucleation events. Here, we employ a novel technique using triple-barrel electrodes to provide temperature readouts in bulk solution and microdroplets, as well as electrochemically monitor freezing events in a microdroplet. Because ice nucleation spans many research fields, it is important to have a variety of tools that can be used to better understand these frozen systems. Our data shows that electrochemistry can provide real-time information on the thermal properties of aqueous environments, and these types of measurements can be extended to microdroplets. The electrochemical signal details all the significant moments in a droplet freezing event, allowing us to use electrochemistry as a stand-alone tool for monitoring freezing events with excellent temporal and spatial resolution.

Graphical abstract: Witnessing a discrete microdroplet freezing event via real-time electrochemical monitoring of solution temperature

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 sep 2024
Accepted
04 des 2024
First published
04 des 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Analyst, 2025,150, 386-394

Witnessing a discrete microdroplet freezing event via real-time electrochemical monitoring of solution temperature

P. J. Kauffmann, C. A. Blanco-Combariza and J. E. Dick, Analyst, 2025, 150, 386 DOI: 10.1039/D4AN01200C

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence. You can use material from this article in other publications without requesting further permissions from the RSC, provided that the correct acknowledgement is given.

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