Producing desired ice faces

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Abstract

The ability to prepare single-crystal faces has become central to developing and testing models for chemistry at interfaces, spectacularly demonstrated by heterogeneous catalysis and nanoscience. This ability has been hampered for hexagonal ice, Ih-A fundamental hydrogen-bonded surface-due to two characteristics of ice: ice does not readily cleave along a crystal lattice plane and properties of ice grown on a substrate can differ significantly from those of neat ice. This work describes laboratory-based methods both to determine the Ih crystal lattice orientation relative to a surface and to use that orientation to prepare any desired face. The work builds on previous results attaining nearly 100% yield of high-quality, single-crystal boules. With these methods, researchers can prepare authentic, single-crystal ice surfaces for numerous studies including uptake measurements, surface reactivity, and catalytic activity of this ubiquitous, fundamental solid.

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Shultz, M. J., Brumberg, A., Bisson, P. J., & Shultz, R. (2015). Producing desired ice faces. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 112(45), E6096–E6100. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1513173112

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