The study of ice nucleation and growth at the nanoscale is of utmost importance in geological and atmospheric sciences. However, existing transmission electron microscopy (TEM) approaches have been unsuccessful in imaging ice formation directly. Herein, we demonstrate how radical scavengers - such as TiO - encased with water in graphene liquid cells (GLCs) facilitate the observation of ice nucleation phenomena at low temperatures. Atomic-resolution imaging reveals the nucleation and growth of cubic ice-phase crystals at close proximity to TiO-water nanointerfaces at low temperatures. Interestingly, both heterogeneously and homogeneously nucleated ice crystals exhibited this cubic phase. Ice crystal nuclei were observed to be more stable at the TiO-water nanointerface, as compared with crystals in the bulk liquid (homogeneous nucleation), suggesting the radical scavenging efficacy of TiO nanoparticles mitigating the electron beam by-products. The present work demonstrates that the use of radical scavengers in GLC TEM shows great promise towards unveiling the nanoscale pathways for ice nucleation and growth dynamic events.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3nr00097dDOI Listing

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