13-07
The development
of the depletion zone during ceiling crystallization: phase shifting
interferometry and simulation results,
CrystEngComm 15 (2013) 2275-2286
A. Adawy, K. Marks,
W.J. de Grip, W.J.P. van Enckevort, E. Vlieg.
Abstract: The
growth of high quality protein crystals is essential for the determination of
their structure. This process is governed by many physical factors such as mass
transport and solution flow. The quality of the crystals is usually better
under diffusion-limited growth conditions, where a depleted zone of the
solution encapsulates the crystal. We developed a Mach-Zehnder-based
phase shifting interferometer coupled to image processing software to study the
concentration gradients which develop around a crystal during its growth or dissolution.
The depletion zones and the diffusion boundary layers around growing and
dissolving KH2PO4 crystals are monitored and processed by a MATLAB based
algorithm. Our main emphasis was to analyze the ceiling crystallization
conditions in which the crystal is placed at the very top of the growth cell
and therefore the solute transport is largely diffusion-limited. The
experimental results are compared with simulations using finite element-based
numerical calculations. The combined results clearly demonstrate the positive
effect of the ceiling crystallization approach on crystal growth.