Abstract

Ice storage is one technique for effective use of thermal energy. Application of bionucleant (a protein from the bacterium Pseudomonas syringae) as a snow inducer in ski field has shown great potential to enhance the quantity of snow and increase freezing temperature. In this study, differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) and lab-built ice formation reactor were employed to study experimentally the heterogeneous ice nucleation under super-cooled conditions at different dissolved bionucleant concentrations. It was found the degree of supercooling is reduced by addition of bionucleant. However, ice nucleation-activity of bionucleant will drop down when bionucleant solution is saturated/supersaturated. In our DSC measured heat release study, when bionucleant acts as ice nucleation agent in aqueous solution, prior to reaching its saturation/supersaturation, there is an increase in latent heat release during freezing/melting as the amount of dissolved bionucleant increases. In another test, the supercooling does not occur in 0.5% bionucleant solution, it began to freeze around 0°C. Our results suggest that, the addition of bionucleant may help induce ice nucleation and increase freezing temperature thereby reduces the energy consumption of ice formation for cold storage.

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