Aqueous vitrification (glass formation) processes are integral to modern cryopreservation, but experimental methods by which to study them are limited, particularly at the mL volume scales relevant to many biomedical applications. Here, we introduce an inexpensive custom optical platform, the isochoric vitrification cryo-macroscope (or "isovitriscope"), to supplement standard techniques with new qualitative and quantitative data streams. The platform consists of an LED light source, a isochoric (constant-volume) chamber with sapphire optical windows, and a camera, which can operate in two modes. One mode enables sharp visual observation of the glass transition and other low-temperature physical processes, including cracking, annealing, ice and hydrate crystallization, cavity formation, melting, The other mode enables tracking of the optical temperature-evolution of the system recorded light intensity, which we demonstrate may be used to measure the onset glass transition temperature with accuracy similar to differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), and to identify the temperature coordinates of other phase change events. The isovitriscope thus offers a single device combining the phenomenological insight of conventional visual inspection with the quantitative insight of techniques like calorimetry, at the >1 mL volume scales increasingly relevant to cryopreservation applications. To demonstrate uses of the isochoric optical platform, we herein conduct a series of observational studies examining the rich multi-phase phenomena at play during isochoric vitrification of binary cryoprotectant solutions; the effect of surface wettabilities on crack formation in the glassy state; the analogy between differential calorimetric and optical analysis; and more. In summary, the isochoric vitrification cryo-macroscope, or isovitriscope, adds a valuable new tool for the study of aqueous vitrification processes.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11520906PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4ra03530eDOI Listing

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