Amorphous aggregates with a very wide size distribution play a central role in crystal nucleation

09 November 2023, Version 3
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

There is mounting evidence that crystal nucleation from supersaturated solution involves the formation and reorganization of prenucleation clusters, contradicting classical nucleation theory. Here, a range of amino acids and peptides is investigated using light scattering, mass spectrometry, and in situ terahertz Raman spectroscopy, showing that the presence of amorphous aggregates is a general phenomenon in supersaturated solutions. Significantly, these aggregates are found on a vast range of length scales from dimers to 30-mers to the nanometer and even micrometer scale, suggesting a continuous distribution throughout this range. Larger amorphous aggregates are sites of spontaneous crystal nucleation and act as intermediates for laser-induced crystal nucleation. These results are shown to be consistent with a nonclassical nucleation model in which barrierless (homogeneous) nucleation of amorphous aggregates is followed by the nucleation of crystals from solute-enriched aggregates. This provides a novel perspective on crystal nucleation.

Keywords

crystal nucleation
aggregates
prenucleation clusters
laser-induced nucleation
low-frequency Raman spectroscopy
dynamic light scattering
mass spectrometry

Supplementary materials

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Supplementary Movies S1
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Aggregate-assisted laser-induced nucleation of alanine from solution (0.18g/mL in D2O, 5 days old).
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Supplementary Movies S2
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Aggregate-assisted laser-induced nucleation of Gly-Gly from solution (0.2g/mL in H2O, 2 days old).
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Supplementary Movies S3
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Aggregate-assisted laser-induced nucleation of Gly-Gly-Gly from solution (0.1g/mL in D2O, 1 day old).
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Supplementary Movies S4
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Aggregate-assisted laser-induced nucleation of Ala-Ala from solution (0.3g/mL in D2O, 1 day old).
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Supplementary Movies S5
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Aggregate-assisted laser-induced nucleation of serine from solution (0.4g/mL in D2O, 1 day old).
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Supplementary Movies S6
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Aggregate-assisted laser-induced nucleation of glutamic acid from solution (0.13g/mL in H2O, 2 days old).
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Supplementary Movies S7
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Aggregate-assisted laser-induced nucleation of phenylalanine from solution (0.05g/mL in H2O, 2 days old).
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Supplementary Movies S8
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Aggregate-assisted laser-induced nucleation of lysine from solution (0.5g/mL in H2O, 2 days old).
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Supplementary Movies S9
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Aggregate-assisted laser-induced nucleation of histidine from solution (0.13g/mL in H2O, 1 day old).
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Supplementary Movies S10
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Evaporation driven spontaneous nucleation of Gly-Gly-Gly.
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Supplementary Movies S11
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Evaporation driven spontaneous homogeneous nucleation of Gly-Gly-Gly (5× speed).
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Supplementary Movies S12
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Evaporation driven spontaneous nucleation of histidine.
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Supplementary Movies S13
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Evaporation driven spontaneous nucleation of alanine (5× speed).
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