{"id":146692,"date":"2015-12-14T18:44:57","date_gmt":"2015-12-14T23:44:57","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.designerchildren.com\/lessons-for-cryonics-from-metallurgy-and-ceramics\/"},"modified":"2015-12-14T18:44:57","modified_gmt":"2015-12-14T23:44:57","slug":"lessons-for-cryonics-from-metallurgy-and-ceramics","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/cryonics\/lessons-for-cryonics-from-metallurgy-and-ceramics\/","title":{"rendered":"Lessons for Cryonics from Metallurgy and Ceramics"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>by Ben Best            CONTENTS: LINKS TO      SECTIONS            <\/p>\n<p>    The scientific study of material    properties has been most advanced in the areas of metallurgy    & ceramics due to the importance of metal tools &    structures as well as clay & glass objects in the technical    progress of civilization. Knowledge concerning the    solidification of alloys and glasses has great relevance to    phenomena of concern in cryonics. Even if it is not immediately    obvious how this information can improve cryonics protocols,    understanding the underlying principles of freezing,    vitrification and cracking make future insights and discoveries    more likely.  <\/p>\n<p>    (return to contents)  <\/p>\n<p>    Mixtures of some metals, such    as copper & nickel, are completely soluble in both liquid    and solid states for all concentrations of both metals. Copper    & nickel have the same crystal structure(FCC) and    have nearly the same atomic radii. The solid formed by cooling    can have any proportion of copper & nickel. Such completely    miscible mixtures of metals are called isomorphous.  <\/p>\n<p>    By contrast, a mixture of lead(Pb) & tin(Sn) is    eutectic because these metals are only partially soluble    in each other when in the solid state. Lead & tin have    different crystal structures(FCC versus BCT) and lead    atoms are much larger. No more than 19.2% by weight of solid    tin can dissolve in solid lead and no more than 2.5% of solid    lead can dissolve in solid tin. The solid lead-tin alloy thus    consists of a mixture of two solid phases, one consisting of a    lead-rich solid (alpha, -phase) that can dissolve in a maximum    of 19.2wt%tin(Sn) at 183C (more at higher    temperature), and one consisting of a tin-rich (beta, -phase)    that can dissolve in a maximum of    2.5wt%lead(Pb) at 183C (more at higher    temperature).  <\/p>\n<p>    For example, above 260C 40wt%;tin in a tin-lead    mixture will be a completely intermixed liquid. The    liquidus line separates pure liquid phase from phases    which can be mixtures of liquid and solid. The solidus    line separates mixtures of liquid and solid from pure solid    (pure -phase or pure -phase at extremes of concentration).    Just below the liquidus line 40wt%tin in a tin-lead    mixture will have some solid -phase tin-lead    (12wt%tin proeutectic) and the rest a    mixture of tin-lead liquid. As temperature drops, the amount of    solid -phase tin-lead in the liquid-solid mixture increases,    and the percentage of tin in the -phase increases until the    temperature reaches 183C and the mixture becomes completely    solid  partially -phase (19.2wt%tin) and    partially -phase (97.5wt%tin) tin-lead mixture,    along with some proeutectic solid. A solvus line    delineates temperatures below which tin and lead are completely    immiscible. Solidification in the alpha proeutectic region    consists of layered growth of solid nodules  with each layer    containing a higher concentration of tin. This layering of    increasing concentrations of tin is called coring.    Faster cooling results in reduced coring.  <\/p>\n<p>    The word eutectic is derived from Greek roots meaning    \"easily melted\". A eutectic mixture has a eutectic composition    for which complete liquification occurs at a lower temperature    (the eutectic temperature) than for any other composition. For    lead & tin the eutectic composition is 61.9wt% tin    and the eutectic temperature is 183C  which makes this    mixture useful as solder. At 183C, compositions of    greater than 61.9wt% tin result in precipitation of a    tin-rich solid in the liquid mixture, whereas compositions of    less than 61.9wt% tin result in precipitation of    lead-rich solid.  <\/p>\n<p>    Surprisingly, the principles of eutectics observed with    mixtures of metals are much the same when applied to other    material mixtures that crystallize, such as glycerol, water and    salt  despite the differences between metallic bonding,    hydrogen bonding and ionic crystallization. Although a eutectic mixture of salt & water    resembles a eutectic mixture of metals in having a eutectic    temperature & composition, the solid phases are pure    crystals of salt & water rather than composites as with    metals  and there is no coring.  <\/p>\n<p>    Eutectic mixtures of salt and water are of critical relevance    in cryonics when freezing occurs. The eutectic composition of    sodium chloride (NaCl) in water is about 23.3wt% NaCl and    the eutectic temperature is about 21.1C. Thus, at    concentrations greater than 23.3wt%NaCl, solid salt    will precipitate from salt water at temperatures near and above    21.1C. At concentrations less than 23.3wt%NaCl,    some of the water will solidify (freeze) and leave a more    highly concentrated salt solution. The latter is what typically    occurs with freezing in a cryonics patient (or meat in a    freezer) because an isotonic solution of NaCl (ie, as solution    that matches the salt concentration of body tissues) is about    0.9%. As solid water precipitates (freezes), the salt    concentration in the remaining fluid increases until the    eutectic composition of 23.3wt%NaCl is reached and    the final solidification of the eutectic mixture occurs at    21.1C. (Freezer temperatures are typically 18C to 22C).  <\/p>\n<p>    But unlike the lead-tin eutectic diagram, there is no solidus    line on either end for water and NaCl  and there is no    concentration of salt solution in which pure NaCl will    precipitate. Below the liquidus line on the left there is a    mixture of saltwater and pure ice. Ocean water (which is about    3.5wt% salt, mostly NaCl) has a freezing temperature of    1.91C, which is to say at 1.91C ice begins to crystallize    amidst a slush of increasingly concentrated salty water. In the    freezing of water as pure water-ice, the water molecules not    only force-away salt ions, but dissolved gasses  which is why    gas bubbles are typically seen in ice cubes.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 1953 the cryobiologist James Lovelock showed how damaging    high salt concentrations can be to cells during the freezing    process. The first theories of freezing damage were based on    Lovelocks's observations. Damage due to    cell breakage and hydrolysis by concentrated salt solutions in    the 15C to 20C temperature range can have devastating    consequences for the tissues of cryonics patients. Moreover,    sodium chloride is not the only salt in human tissue. Calcium    chloride has a eutectic composition of 40wt% and a    eutectic temperature of 41C  meaning that salt damage and    hydrolysis can occur well below 21C.  <\/p>\n<p>    One can speak of the eutectic temperature and composition of a    mixture of water, glycerol and NaCl. The eutectic    composition is 73% glycerol, 5% NaCl and the eutectic    temperature is 64C. But eutectic temperature describes    freezing temperature under equilibrium    conditions. With rapid cooling solidification will occur at    lower temperatures.  <\/p>\n<p>    (return to contents)  <\/p>\n<p>    Metals solidify as crystals. A    pure metal will typically crystallize at a temperature which is    lower than the temperature at which it will melt. The    difference between melting and minimum solidification    temperature is referred to as the maximum undercooling.    Maximum undercooling is only 80C for lead, but is 330C for    platinum. The undercooling phenomenon is due to the way pure    metals crystallize.  <\/p>\n<p>    In order to crystallize, atoms of a pure metal must first form    a tiny crystalline nucleus. When a solid nucleus forms the    atoms in the liquid surrounding it tend to make the nucleus    dissolve back into the liquid  a phenomenon related to the    surface energy of the nucleus. Fusion into a solid crystal    releases heat  heat which can cause adjacent atoms in the    nucleus to dissolve. The high fusion energy of platinum    contributes significantly to the high solidification    temperature and maximum undercooling of that metal.  <\/p>\n<p>    A large crystal, however, is not so vulnerable to dissolut<br \/>\nion    at the surface. The energy factors favoring dissolution vary in    proportion to the nucleus surface area, whereas the energy    factors favoring nucleus growth vary in proportion to volume.    Surface area varies with the square of the radius, whereas    volume varies with the cube of the radius. For each metal and    at each temperature there is a critical radius size above which    a nucleus will tend grow and below which it will tend to    dissolve. As temperature becomes lower, the critical nucleus    radius becomes smaller and easier to achieve. (For more    information on water nucleation, see Freezing versus Melting    Temperature).<\/p>\n<p>    Crystallization of pure metals is described as homogenous    nucleation because a pure compound is homogenous.    Crystallization may occur with much less undercooling if a    higher melting-point metal is added that has similar crystal    structure to the original metal, but which is insoluble at the    melting temperature of the original metal. Crystal growth    around these insoluble nuclei is referred to as heterogenous    nucleation.  <\/p>\n<p>    When a metal solidifies, many crystalline nuclei form and grow    simultaneously until the crystals have absorbed all of the    remaining liquid atoms. As a result, a block of metal is    described as polycrystalline  like a sugar cube    composed of many crystal grains (although for a metal the    grains are very much smaller). Grain boundaries have surface    tension  the same energy that makes water bead into a    spherical shape so as to minimize surface area. Fewer crystals    mean less total surface energy. For this reason rewarming of a    metal results in recrystallization of the smaller grains into    larger grains before the melting temperature of the metal is    reached.<\/p>\n<p>    The predominant crystal forms for pure metals are described as    Face-Centered Cubic (FCC), Body-Centered Cubic    (BCC) and Hexagonal Close-Packed (HCP). [Tin has a    Body-Centered Tetragonal (BCT) crystal at freezing    temperature.] FCC and BCC crystals have cubic unit cells, but    HCP unit cells are hexagonal on the plane of the base and have    rectangular shapes on the vertical sides. The width of these    rectangles (the a-axis size) is less than the height    (the c-axis size). Atoms in BCC crystals are surrounded    by 8 nearest-neighbor atoms (have coordination number 8),    whereas atoms in FCC and HCP crystals have 12 nearest    neighbors. Atoms in FCC and HCP crystals are thus more tightly    packed than in BCC  are more dense.  <\/p>\n<p>    The crystal structure of a metal has a significant impact on    the metal's material properties. Gold and lead are easily    plastically deformed because their FCC crystal structure has    many slip planes  planes along which displacements can    slide. HCP metals such as titanium and cobalt have fewer slip    planes and are thus less easily plastically deformed. Iron has    a BCC crystal structure at room temperature, but an FCC    structure at temperatures closer to 1000C (iron melts at    1539C).<\/p>\n<p>    The ease with which a metal can plastically deform is    quantified in metallurgy by ductility, defined as  <\/p>\n<p>        fracture length - original    length    ----------------------------------------        original    length  <\/p>\n<p>    The conventional concepts of ductile &    malleable are both manifestations of    metallurgical ductility. The opposite of ductility is    brittleness.  <\/p>\n<p>    Other notable material properties of metals are    stiffness, yield strength and hardness.    Like ductility\/brittleness, these properties are all related to    the way a metal responds to stress. Stress (force per    unit area) can result in strain (deformation). The    stress of a person standing on a diving board results in the    strain seen in the bending of the board. Deformation can be    either elastic or plastic.  <\/p>\n<p>    For small amounts of stress a metal is completely elastic     stiffness is another term for modulus of elasticity    (Young's modulus). Stiffness is due to the resistance to    separation between atoms  the interatomic bonding force.    Stiffness diminishes with heating and increases with cooling.    (The coefficient of thermal expansion  the amount by    which length or volume increase with increasing temperature     is similarly a function of interatomic bonding energy.)  <\/p>\n<p>    For large amounts of applied stress a metal will deform    permanently (plastically) rather than elastically return to the    original shape. The amount of stress just beyond the threshold    of plastic deformation is called yield strength. Yield    strength varies inversely with grain size  smaller grains mean    greater yield strength.  <\/p>\n<p>    When a metal plastically deforms, the manner in which it does    so is by the formation and propagation of flaws (dislocations)    within the crystal grains. Grain boundaries resist crystal    propagation of dislocations, which is why smaller grain size    increases yield strength. The dislocations themselves resist    further dislocation  a phenomenon known as strain    hardening. When a blacksmith pounds on a horseshoe, he or    she is making the horseshoe harder by increasing the number of    dislocations and reducing grain size.  <\/p>\n<p>    With enough stress a metal will acquire as many dislocations as    it can handle without weakening  a level of stress described    as ultimate tensile strength. Ultimate tensile strength    is directly related to the hardness of the material. (Diamond    is the hardest substance.) With further application of stress,    the dislocations in the metal merge to form tiny fissures which    grow into larger cracks until the metal finally fractures.  <\/p>\n<p>    In metals, mobile electrons function both to conduct    electricity and to conduct heat. At a given temperature the    thermal and electrical conductivities are proportional, but    raising temperature increases thermal conductivity while    decreasing electrical conductivity. These concepts are    expressed quantitatively as the Wiedemann-Franz Law    (where the constant of proportionality, L, is the    Lorenz number and T is temperature):  <\/p>\n<p>         thermal    conductivity        -----------------------------=LT     electrical conductivity          <\/p>\n<p>    Metals are the best conductors of heat, as can be seen from the    following table, where thermal conductivity is expressed as    Watts per Kelvin-Meters    [W\/(K.m)]. For fibrous or porous    material, heat transfer occurs by a combination of conduction,    convection and thermal radiation  while being quoted as    \"effective thermal conductivity\".  <\/p>\n<p>    Note that, for example, the thermal conductivity of perlite is temperature    dependent.  <\/p>\n<p>    (return to contents)  <\/p>\n<p>    A water molecule is often visualized as V-shaped 2-dimensional    object, with two hydrogens attached to an oxygen at a 104.5    angle. Water molecules can also be visualized as 3-dimensional    tetrahedrons  4-cornered, objects with a triangle on    four sides like a pyramid, with the oxygen atom in the middle.    Two of the corners are hydrogen atoms and the other two corners    are \"lone-pairs\" of electrons that complete the electron octet    of the sp3 hybrid orbitals. A perfect tetrahedron    would have 109.5 angles between each pair of corners, but the    higher electronegativity of the lone-pairs forces them apart    and forces the hydrogen atoms closer together. Most liquids are    held together by van der Waals forces between the molecules.    But water is primarily held together by hydrogen-bonds     bonds between hydrogens and lone-pairs that are ten times    stronger than van der Waals forces, but only a tenth as strong    as the covalent bond holding hydrogen to oxygen. Hydrogen    bonding accounts for the high heat capacity and high surface    tension of water. (At one calorie per gram per degree Celcius,    water has over ten times the specific heat capacity of copper.)  <\/p>\n<p>    In ice, four oxygen atoms form a tetrahedron with hydrogen    atoms lying close to the lines between the<br \/>\n oxygens. Because    water molecules in ice are forced into the 109.5 angles of the    tetrahedral crystal structure, they cannot pack as tightly as    can liquid water that is slightly warmer. Water has a maximum    density at about 4C (3.98C to be more precise) because at    that temperature the flexibility of hydrogen bonds combined    with the low molecular mobility allows for the closest packing    of the water molecules. As temperature approaches the freezing    point, the more rigid tetrahedral arrangement is increasingly    forced upon the molecules.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ice in a lake can only freeze after all of the    water in the lake has cooled to at least 4C because the    heavier water falls to the bottom. Between 4C and 0C the    lighter, colder water stays on the surface where it can be    further cooled by cold air to freezing while \"floating\" on the    heavier (most dense) water that is closer to 4C. The freezing    of water is accompanied by an approximate 9% increase in    volume. The fact that the atmospheric pressure forms of ice are    less dense than water (0.917 grams\/cm3) means that    ice stays on the surface of lakes  allowing fish to survive.    When ice floats in water 10% of its volume will be above the    surface (more if the ice contains air bubbles). Water at 0C    has 15% of the molecules hydrogen-bonded, whereas ice at 0C    has nearly 100% of the molecules hydrogen-bonded. Cooling of    one gram of water 1C requires removal of one calorie of heat,    but freezing of one gram of water at 0C (no temperature    change) requires removal of 80calories of heat (called    the latent heat of fusion because the heat flow is    \"concealed\" by the absence of temperature change). Ocean water    freezes at 1.7C, with about a fifth of the salt sequestered    in pockets between the ice crystals.  <\/p>\n<p>    The expansion of water upon freezing is what makes water pipes    burst in wintertime. Water easily seeps into tiny cracks in    rocks, which is why seasonal cycles of freezing and thawing can    eventually reduce great boulders to rubble.  <\/p>\n<p>    There are more solid forms of water than of any other known    substance. Below about 2,700 atmospheres of pressure    crystalline ice is known as iceI, but above 2,700    atmospheres there are at least 13 other crystal forms (designed    by roman numerals II to XIV thus far). IceI exists in two    crystal forms: hexagonal ice (iceIh) and    cubic ice (iceIc). Cubic ice can be formed    by deposition of water vapor onto a solid surface in the    temperature range of 140C to 120C. Below 140C the water    vapor molecules do not have enough energy to organize    themselves into crystals and therefore lie where they land on    the surface in an amorphous (vitrified) form. Hexagonal ice nuclei    are slightly larger than cubic ice nuclei, which means that    cubic ice is lost to hexagonal ice under conditions of crystal    growth[JOURNAL OF CRYSTAL GROWTH; Vigier,G; 84:309-315    (1987)]. Hexagonal ice does not transform into a cubic or    amorphous form when cooled. Therefore, only hexagonal ice is relevant to the cooling of a    cryonics patient at atmospheric pressure. (For more on the    forms of ice under pressure, see my essay High Pressure Cryonics.)  <\/p>\n<p>    The fact that ice has a hexagonal crystal structure might not    be surprising in light of the fact that snowflakes are hexagonal. The hexagonal    crystal of ice resembles the Hexagonal Close-Packed (HCP)    structure of metals such as cobalt, but is much less dense     the coordination number (number of nearest neighbors) is 4    rather than the 12 of HCP. Four oxygen atoms form a tetrahedron    in the ice lattice and hydrogen atoms lie close to these    tetrahedral lines.<\/p>\n<p>    Cubic ice has a crystal structure like that of diamond, whereas    hexagonal ice is more like graphite. Like hexagonal ice,    graphite crystal hexagons form a-axis layers, but the layers    are flattened in graphite, allowing them to slip more easily.    Both cubic and hexagonal ice have cyclohexane-like rings of    oxygen atoms in a \"chair\" conformation on the basal layer. But    cyclohexane-like rings formed between layers has a \"boat\"    conformation for hexagonal ice as distinct from the more    symmetric \"chair\" conformation in cubic ice.  <\/p>\n<p>    Similar to metals, water freezes by a process of nucleation and    nucleus-growth into a polycrystalline material composed of    many grains. At cooling rates of a few degrees Celsius per    minute, relatively large ice grains are formed which do not    result in intracellular mechanical damage in tissues (although    salt damage is maximized). At cooling rates higher than 10C    per minute, osmotic effects lessen, salt damage is reduced, but    the small grains formed intracellularly cause mechanical    damage. The use of cryoprotectants can reduce both the salt    damage and the damage due to intracellular ice.  <\/p>\n<p>    Although ice has more than twice the thermal conductivity of    water, ice is nonetheless a relatively poor conductor of heat    (good insulator), which makes it a good building material for    igloos.  <\/p>\n<p>    Like polycrystalline metals, ice deforms by dislocation     preferentially along slip planes. In the temperature range of    3C to 40C ice is perfectly elastic for a maximum stress of    10 atmospheres applied no faster than 5 atmospheres per second.    The rate of pressure application is noteworthy. Although the    bonds between layers are stronger in hexagonal ice than they    are in graphite, ice can nonetheless deform plastically under    sustained pressure by the sliding of layers  like cards in a    deck of cards. This kind of deformation by sustained stress    maintained over long periods is known as creep  and it    partly explains glacier movement. Hexagonal ice ceases to show    any plastic properties below -70C. Like other brittle    materials low temperature ice can show great resistance to    stress or impact up to a certain threshold and then shatter     with no intermediate plastic deformation.  <\/p>\n<p>    Cooling or heating a material can create stresses leading to    fracture, ie, thermal shock. Thermal shock resistance    typically varies directly with fracture strength & thermal    conductivity while it varies inversely with stiffness &    thermal expansivity. Vulnerability to thermal shock is higher    for materials like ice which have crystals that are not    symmetric in all directions (anisotropic) because thermal    expansion is dependent upon crystallographic dimensions. For    ice, thermal conductivity increases exponentially by about 5    times when cooling from 0C to liquid nitrogen temperature,    whereas the coefficient of linear expansion decreases linearly    to a fifth of the value it has at 0C. The combination of these    factors should more than compensate for increased stiffness    & brittleness with declining temperature. For freezing    solid blocks of ice it would seem that the rate of cooling    could accelerate with declining temperature with reduced risk    of thermal shock. Cryonics patients are not, however, solid    blocks of ices  even though the human brain is about 85% water     because water has been replaced by cryoprotectant fluid.  <\/p>\n<p>    (return to contents)<\/p>\n<p>    The word ceramic derives from    the Greek roots for \"burnt stuff\"  in reference to the    hardening of clays upon high-temperature heat-treatment. A more    modern definition might refer to solid inorganic, non-metallic    compounds which are not polymers  including most glasses. But    even metals can form glasses if cooled quickly enough.  <\/p>\n<p>    In molecular terms, glasses are materials that form amorphous    rather than crystalline solids upon cooling (ie, materials that    vitrify). Although there are many plausible explanations for    why materials vitrify rather than crystallize, there is no    general rule. In fact, the reason why vitrification occurs may    be different for different materials  including a combination    of factors such as viscosity, heat of fusion, mixed bonding    type, hydrogen-bonding, colligativ<br \/>\ne effects and the effect of    cooling rate. For most materials that vitrify, cooling rate is    critical  meaning that if cooling rate is too slow the    material will crystallize rather than vitrify.  <\/p>\n<p>    At glass transition temperature (Tg) there is    a change in many physical properties (as with freezing), but    the changes occur over a temperature range with the formation    of a glassy solid rather than the crystal formed at the more    precise melting (fusion) temperature (Tm).    (For more details on the process of vitrification, see my    essays Vitrification    in Cryonics and Physical Parameters of Cooling in Cryonics.)  <\/p>\n<p>    Pure silicon dioxide (silica) will form a crystal if cooled    slowly. But silica is extremely viscous  about a half-billion    times more viscous at its melting temperature than water at its    melting temperature. Such high viscosity is a strong impediment    to the formation and growth of crystal nuclei. Silica therefore    has a strong tendency to supercool and to vitrify. Upon warming, however,    before melting vitreous silica can easily transform into    crystalline silica  a process known as devitrification.  <\/p>\n<p>    (It should be noted that viscosity cannot be the only    explanation for vitrification. The viscosity of 60wt%    sucrose solution declines as sucrose concentration is either    increased or decreased. A 50-to-60wt% sucrose solution    has the same viscosity as a 60-to-80wt% sucrose solution,    ie, viscosity versus wt% forms an inverted-U curve. Yet a    60-to-80wt% sucrose solution can vitrify more readily    than a 50-to-60wt% sucrose solution.)  <\/p>\n<p>    The chemical bonding in crystalline silica shows the ordered    regularity of a lattice, whereas vitreous silica has more the    appearance of a random network. Although the chemical bonding    in silica is mainly covalent, it has a character that is    somewhat ionic. Materials with mixed bonding type are more    viscous and more likely to form random networks than to form    regular crystals. The irregularity of the bonding is a partial    explanation for the fact that the temperature of vitrification    (Tg) is less precise than the temperature of    crystallization because when bonding is uniform the temperature    at which the bonds will break will be more precise. The fact    that nucleation or vitrification is dependent on cooling rate    also accounts for the imprecision of Tg. For    silica glasses, Tg can vary as much as 100 to    200C depending on the cooling rate (vitrification occurs at    higher temperatures for faster cooling.) Near    Tg the probability of crystal growth and    nucleation increases very rapidly, so cooling rate near    Tg is particularly critical in determining    whether crystallization or vitrification occurs.<\/p>\n<p>    The addition of 25% sodium oxide (soda,Na2O) to    silica reduces the viscosity and lowers the melting point from    1,723C to 850C. Sodium oxide also increases the tendency of    silicon dioxide to form networks rather than crystals.    Sodium-oxygen bridges may interrupt the regular silicon-oxygen    bonding and\/or sodium ions may intersperse among the silica    molecules to prevent the formation of regular crystals (a    colligative effect). But the resulting glass is water-soluble.    If calcium oxide (lime, CaO) is added as a stabilizer, the    glass becomes water-insoluble. Most glass used for windows and    drinking-vessels is soda-lime glass  made from 75% silica, 15%    soda and 10% lime (although 1wt% aluminum oxide is often    added as well).  <\/p>\n<p>    Ice formation is frequently prevented by using compounds having    hydroxyl (OH) groups, such as ethylene glycol (car    anti-freeze), propylene glycol (ice cream anti-freeze) or    glycerol. Such cryoprotectants probably vitrify by their    viscosity as well as by their ability to interrupt the ice    lattice by hydrogen-bonding with the water molecules.    Glycerol is by far the most viscous of these three    cryoprotectants. The high viscosity & larger molecular size    of glycerol may have much to do with why it permeates the most    slowly into tissues. In cryonics, glycerol has typically been    assisted in reducing freezing by the colligative effects of a    carrier solution.  <\/p>\n<p>    THE MERCK INDEX gives pure glycerol a melting point of 17.8C,    but the profound tendency of glycerol to supercool is described    by saying that it \"solidifies after prolonged cooling at 0    forming a shiny orthorhombic crystal\"  meaning that the    freezing point is effectively lower than the melting point. A    30% (weight\/weight) mixture of glycerol and water freezes at    9.5C whereas an 80% mixture freezes at 20C. The eutectic    temperature and composition of glycerol is about 46C for 67    wt% glycerol. This is of significance because compositions near    the eutectic are the easiest to vitrify because the liquid is    the least supercooled at Tg    (Tg for pure glycerol is about 88C). (As    mentioned above, a glycerol\/water mixture which includes 5%    sodium chloride will have a eutectic composition of 73%    glycerol and a eutectic temperature of 64C.)  <\/p>\n<p>    Salt solutions can vitrify, and they vitrify best at their    eutectic concentrations and temperatures. Nitrates vitrify    better than chlorides, and magnesium (Mg2+) vitrify    better than salts of zinc (Zn2+)[THE JOURNAL    OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS; Angell,CA; 52(1):1058-1068    (1970)].<\/p>\n<p>    Mixtures of sugar and water can solidify either by    crystallization or by vitrification. At higher temperatures    above a certain sugar concentration, sugar becomes insoluble in    water (the solubility curve in the sugar phase diagram),    the eutectic temperature(Te) being the    lowest temperature at which a liquid water\/sugar mixture can    exist in equilibrium  or the highest temperature at which    water and sugar can freeze together. But if a sugar-water    mixture is cooled rapidly enough (faster than the critical cooling    rate), increasing viscosity impedes the ability of the    sugar-water mixture to crystallize, and the mixture will    vitrify at a glass transition    temperatureTg. (Pure water is assumed    to vitrify at 135C, which would require a cooling rate of    3millionC per second.) If cooling occurs slower    than at the critical cooling rate, frozen pure water ice may    form, leaving a more concentrated unfrozen sugar-water liquid.    The more concentrated unfrozen sugar-water liquid will have a    new, higher glass transition    temperatureTg'[THERMOCHEMICA ACTA; Goff,HD; 399(1-2):43-55    (2003)]. Tg' will be a    maximum(Tg'max) at the    highest freeze-concentrated liquid    concentration(cg'max). For    the vitrification solutions used in cryonics,    Tg is typically 123C and    Tg' is about 110C. For a poorly perfused    cryonics patient that has partial freezing, slow cooling should    begin above 110C to minimize cracking from thermal stress.  <\/p>\n<p>    A number of physical properties of glassy materials show a    marked change at Tg. The increase in    viscosity to 3x1014 (300 trillion) Poise (the    strain point) has dubiously been used as the defining    characteristic of Tg. (The strain    point is the limit of viscosity beyond which there is no    deformation before fracture in response to applied stress.)    Heat capacity decreases somewhat linearly above and below    Tg, but decreases markedly near    Tg. This is important both because it makes    Tg easier for scientists to determine by    using a Differential Scanning Calorimeter    (DSC) and because below Tg the same    amount of cooling will result in a significantly greater    temperature drop. There is a reduction in specific volume    (volume per unit mass) at Tg, but this change    is very slight compared to the change in heat capacity.  <\/p>\n<p>    There is, however, another property that decreases markedly at    Tg  the coefficient of thermal expansion.    Below Tg, however, the decline in thermal    expansivity with temperature for glasses is less than the    decline above Tg. Glucose, as a notable    example, shows a fourfold decrease in th<br \/>\nermal expansivity at    its 27C glass transition temperature. Glasses typically have    lower thermal expansivity than metals, which is why it is    easier to remove a metal lid from a glass jar by warming it.    (Silica has the lowest coefficient of thermal expansion of any    known substance.)  <\/p>\n<p>    The rapid change of thermal expansivity at Tg    and the imprecise temperature of Tg may    create stresses within a vitrifying material. The decreasing    volume associated with cooling and the fact that the exterior    surface cools before the interior means that the liquid    interior may try to contract more than the rigid exterior will    allow. A vitrified solid will have internal stresses in    proportion to the rate of cooling. For most commercial glass    this has little consequence, but in optical glass the result    can be birefringence (different index of refraction in    different directions). To eliminate birefringence, optical    glass is typically annealed, ie, heated slowly above the    strain point (3x1014 Poise) to the annealing    point (1013 Poise) where atomic diffusion is    rapid enough to eliminate internal stress, but not so rapid as    to result in devitrification. Then the glass is slowly recooled    to the strain point and can be cooled more quickly below the    strain point. (In metallurgy, annealling can reduced cored    structure, reduce internal stress and increase grain size.)  <\/p>\n<p>    In non-optical glasses used in applications where resistance to    cracking is more important than absence of internal stress,    compressive stresses are intentionally introduced by a process    called tempering. The glass is heated above the strain    point and then very rapidly cooled. The compression at the    surface resulting from the delayed shrinking of the interior    can increase the strength of the glass considerably.  <\/p>\n<p>    Thermal conductivity for glass is much less than for metal.    Thermal conductivity for glass (vitreous silicon dioxide) is    one tenth the thermal conductivity of quartz (crystalline    silicon dioxide). Non-metallic solids transfer heat by lattice    vibrations (phonons: quanta of lattice vibrations),    rather than by any net material motion (metals transfer heat by    mobile electrons).  <\/p>\n<p>    In glassy materials thermal conductivity drops as temperature    decreases  the opposite to what happens in crystalline    materials. This low and declining thermal conductivity could    have the unfortunate consequence of creating internal stresses    in a vitrified cryonics patient subject to nonuniform cooling    (as when the upper surface is being cooled more rapidly than    the lower surface). Internal stresses are of concern in glassy    materials because glasses cannot plastically deform, despite    their high elasticity (low stiffness). (Note the elasticity of    fiber optic cables.) A glass subject to stress (internal or    external) will elastically deform up to the point of fracture.    A glass marble will either bounce or shatter  it will not    plastically deform. Unlike polycrystalline materials, a crack    in glass travels through a single homogenous phase, unimpeded    by grain boundaries. An imperfectly vitrified glass is even    more vulnerable to cracking, however, because of the mismatch    of expansion coefficients between the glass and the crystal.  <\/p>\n<p>    (return to contents)  <\/p>\n<p>    Although there is much to learn from    materials science which is applicable to cryonics, it is    important to remember that a cryonics patient is never a block    of ice or glass. The human body is mostly water, but the    non-water fraction has significant material properties.    Although the brain is 85% water, human white matter is quite    fatty (55% lipid by dry weight with myelin being 70% lipid) and    may resist diffusion of vitrification solution.  <\/p>\n<p>    Material properties of a vitrified organ may be quite different    from those of a glass. Thermal expansivity is a function of    bonding strength. Polymers have a very high thermal expansivity    due to weak secondary intermolecular bonding  which is    relevant to the extent that proteins and nucleic acids can be    considered polymers. The difference in thermal expansivity    between tissue macromolecules and vitreous material could    produce large internal stresses if that were the only operative    physical property. In practice, vitrified organs do not    fracture as easily as a pure solution of cryoprotectant mixture    of the same concentration & volume  possibly because of    the lower brittleness of biological tissues.  <\/p>\n<p>    It is thought that even with annealing treatment it may not be    possible to take a vitrified cryonics patient to liquid    nitrogen temperature without internal stresses that lead to    cracking. However, just as cryoprotectants are introduced to    reduce or eliminate crystal formation, other additives may be    found in cryonics which can alter material properties such as    thermal expansivity, thermal conductivity stiffness or fracture    strength such that liquid nitrogen temperature storage without    cracking may be possible.  <\/p>\n<p>    (return to contents)<\/p>\n<p>      HOME    PAGE  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Read the original post:<br \/>\n<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"http:\/\/www.benbest.com\/cryonics\/lessons.html\" title=\"Lessons for Cryonics from Metallurgy and Ceramics\">Lessons for Cryonics from Metallurgy and Ceramics<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> by Ben Best CONTENTS: LINKS TO SECTIONS The scientific study of material properties has been most advanced in the areas of metallurgy &#038; ceramics due to the importance of metal tools &#038; structures as well as clay &#038; glass objects in the technical progress of civilization. Knowledge concerning the solidification of alloys and glasses has great relevance to phenomena of concern in cryonics. Even if it is not immediately obvious how this information can improve cryonics protocols, understanding the underlying principles of freezing, vitrification and cracking make future insights and discoveries more likely.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/cryonics\/lessons-for-cryonics-from-metallurgy-and-ceramics\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187739],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-146692","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-cryonics"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/146692"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=146692"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/146692\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=146692"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=146692"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=146692"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}