Studying crystallisation processes using electron microscopy: The importance of sample preparation
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Ilett, Martha; Afzali, Maryam; Abdulkarim, Bilal; Aslam, Zabeada; Foster, Stephanie; Burgos Ruiz, Miguel; Kim, Yi-Yeoun; Meldrum, Fiona C.; Drummond-Brydson, Rik M.Editorial
Wiley
Materia
Crystallisation Electron microscopy Sample preparation
Date
2024-04-09Referencia bibliográfica
Ilett, M., Afzali, M., Abdulkarim, B., Aslam, Z., Foster, S., Burgos-Ruiz, M., Kim, Y.-Y., Meldrum, F., & Drummond-Brydson, R. M. (2024). Studying crystallisation processes using electron microscopy: The importance of sample preparation. Journal of Microscopy, 1–14. [https://doi.org/10.1111/jmi.13300]
Patrocinador
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, Grant/Award Numbers: EP/R018820/1, EP/M028143/1; University Of Leeds; Wellcome, Grant/Award Numbers: 108466/Z/15/Z, 221524/Z/20/ZRésumé
We present a comparison of common electron microscopy sample preparation methods for studying crystallisation processes from solution using both scanning and transmission electron microscopy (SEM and TEM). We focus on two widely studied inorganic systems: calcium sulphate, gypsum (CaSO4·2H2O) and calcium carbonate (CaCO3). We find significant differences in crystallisation kinetics and polymorph selection between the different sample preparation methods, which indicate that drying and chemical quenching can induce severe artefacts that are capable of masking the true native state of the crystallising solution. Overall, these results highlight the importance of cryogenic (cryo)-quenching crystallising solutions and the use of full cryo-TEM as the most reliable method for studying the early stages of crystallisation.