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Antifreezes in fish work quite similarly.


Antifreezes in fish work quite similarly

Though any ordinary cold-blooded creature would freeze solid in the 28.5[deg.]F to 32[deg.]F polar oceans, some fish species manage to stay fluid and flexible in the supercooled waters by carrying antifreeze antifreeze, substance added to a solvent to lower its freezing point. The solution formed is called an antifreeze mixture. Antifreeze is typically added to water in the cooling system of an internal-combustion engine so that it may be cooled below the freezing point  in their blood (SN: 11/22/86, p. 330). These fish come equipped with a variety of proteins or protein-sugar compounds that stick to forming ice crystals and stunt their growth. Scientists are still puzzling over the mechanism, but a report in the February PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences.  (Vol. 86, No. 3) provides new clues.

Arthur L. DeVries of the University of Illinois University of Illinois may refer to:
  • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (flagship campus)
  • University of Illinois at Chicago
  • University of Illinois at Springfield
  • University of Illinois system
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 in Urbana and his colleagues compared the effects of antifreezes from six different fish. By observing the way the stunted ice crystals grew, the scientists could see which crystal faces the antifreezes attacked. Though they differed in structure, the six compounds worked in strikingly similar ways.

The antifreezes don't lower the temperature at which ice melts -- only the temperature at which ice rapidly crystallizes -- so there are a few degrees between the melting point melting point, temperature at which a substance changes its state from solid to liquid. Under standard atmospheric pressure different pure crystalline solids will each melt at a different specific temperature; thus melting point is a characteristic of a substance and  and freezing point freezing point

Temperature at which a liquid becomes a solid. When the pressure surrounding the liquid is increased, the freezing point is raised. The addition of some solids can lower the freezing point of a liquid, a principle used when salt is applied to melt ice on
 of such an antifreeze solution. The scientists set the temperature somewhere in this margin and exposed a single ice crystal to each antifreeze.

The exposed ice crystals changed shape as they grew. Normally, the crystals grow in hexagonal prisms In geometry, the hexagonal prism is a prism with hexagonal base.

It is an octahedron. However, the term octahedron is mainly used with "regular" in front or implied, hence not meaning a hexagonal prism; in the general meaning the term octahedron
 -- like hexagonal hex·ag·o·nal  
adj.
1. Having six sides.

2. Containing a hexagon or shaped like one.

3. Mineralogy
 hat boxes. More water molecules tend to stick to the sides of the box than to the top or bottom, making it wider. Antifreeze molecules mainly attacked the sides, allowing only the top and bottom (basal planes) to add layers, so the boxes got tall and skinny.

The antifreezes also changed the crystals in more complicated ways. In all of the six cases, sloping, pyramidal faces emerged and in several the original prism-shaped crystal became a pyramid. In five of the six cases, the antifreeze also slowed growth on the basal planes by causing hexagonal pits to develop. The pits got deeper and wider as new layers built up around them.

The researchers propose that these six quite different molecules could act so similarly if they all have partially charged, or polar, areas the same distances apart. If that were the case, each antifreeze would have the same preferred sites where the polar areas would fit into the crystal lattice crystal lattice

Three-dimensional configuration of points connected by lines used to describe the orderly arrangement of atoms in a crystal. Each point represents one or more atoms in the actual crystal.
. However, another experiment looking at where the individual molecules attached showed that the six types attach to ice differently on a molecular level. Any proposed answer to the antifreeze puzzle will have to take into account both the observed similarities and the differences.
COPYRIGHT 1989 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1989, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Flam, Faye
Publication:Science News
Date:Feb 18, 1989
Words:429
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