Résumé

The high-pressure freezing (HPF) technique was applied to the cryo-immobilization of alginate gels and the quality of the freezing analyzed on a TEM by comparison of the segregation pattern of samples of decreasing thickness. Dynamic simulations of heat transfer within an idealized slab of pure water surrounded by two walls of aluminum were performed to illustrate the effect of the heat-transfer coeff. by convection on the cooling rate of the sample. Heat-transfer coeffs. in liq. nitrogen and liq. propane at ambient pressure were measured using a carefully characterized thermocouple and the values incorporated as parameters in heat-transfer simulations to compare the efficiency of the plunge-freezing technique with the high-pressure freezing technique. Values of the heat-transfer coeff. in liq. nitrogen and liq. propane, calcd. between 273 K and 173 K were 670 and 18420 W/m2/K, resp. Based on TEM observations and the results of heat-transfer simulations, the HPF technique was adapted to the cryo-fixation of 50-mm-thick alginate gels. The occurrence of artifacts was rejected because no differences were obsd. in the pattern of cryo-fixed and freeze-substituted samples of various thickness, with and without ethanol as cryo-protectant. A sample thickness of 50 mm was found to ensure an adequate preservation of structures as small as a few nanometers, as verified by TEM and SEM observations. Finally, DSC measurements on alginate solns. and alginate beads revealed that under the exptl. conditions (0-3%), alginate cannot be considered to be an efficient cryo-protectant. [on SciFinder (R)]

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