I typically collect data at -50C on all small molecule samples. I've had
quite a few cases where there are phase transitions, and you can damage
the crystals, especially when the molecules are packed in a pi-pi stacking
motif, or I'm dealing with alloy systems.

I've also collected data at 16K, so it all depends on your sample.

Instead of finding out if there is a phase transition, -50C seems to be a
good choice of a temperature to reduce the displacement amplitudes,
radiation damage, and solvent loss.

Bernie Santarsiero


On Thu, June 19, 2008 9:40 am, Diana Tomchick wrote:
> Every small molecule dataset I collected as a graduate student in
> chemistry back in the mid to late 1980's was at 100K. I never had to
> worry about crystal slippage during collection, organic solvent
> evaporation, air oxidation of the sample (organometallic metal
> clusters) or secondary radiation damage.
>
> When I switched to protein crystallography, I was absolutely amazed
> when told that "you can not cool a protein crystal below 4 degrees C
> for data collection."
>
> How times have changed,
>
> Diana
>
> On Jun 19, 2008, at 9:03 AM, Ian Tickle wrote:
>
>> I would go along with Harry & friends, I used crystal cooling when I
>> was
>> at Aafje Vos' Struktuurchemie lab in Groningen in 1972, when the
>> technique had already been in routine use there for at least 10 years,
>> in order to study compounds that are liquid at ambient temp (of course
>> it was custom-built kit using a collection of liq N2 Dewar vessel &
>> tubes, nothing as fancy as a Cryostream!).  The Groningen group really
>> pioneered the use of low temp for small molecule structures and I
>> don't
>> recall increased mosaicity ever being an issue.  Occasionally you
>> would
>> get a compound with a phase transition on the way down and the crystal
>> would literally explode in a puff of powder before your eyes!  The
>> motive for using low temp was of course to reduce the thermal motion
>> and
>> libration effects, and thus greatly improve the accuracy of the
>> molecular geometry, and low temp is pretty well essential if you're
>> into
>> valence density deformation maps, again in order the minimise the
>> contribution from thermal motion.
>>
>> -- Ian
>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of harry powell
>>> Sent: 19 June 2008 14:05
>>> To: Remy Loris
>>> Cc: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
>>> Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] is it Ok to freeze
>>>
>>> Hi
>>>
>>> Without wishing to start an argument, I've been checking with
>>> some of my colleagues who are chemical crystallographers -
>>> the reply I get is that, for routine structural analysis,
>>> "pretty well all datasets are collected at 100K unless the
>>> crystals fall apart at low T, or if the cryostream is broken".
>>>
>>> I should point out that the first production Cryostream that
>>> I came across (serial number 2, which I think may have been
>>> the first one sold!) was in the Cambridge Department of
>>> Chemistry in about 1985. They didn't become common until the
>>> mid-1990's in PX labs, when they were already
>>> well-established as a bit of pretty well essential kit for
>>> small molecule work.
>>>
>>> So although what Remy says is true, the practice is to
>>> cryocool most of the time.
>>>
>>>
>>> On 19 Jun 2008, at 12:08, Remy Loris wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>     Typically crystals of small organic compounds do not
>>> require freezing as there are no solvent channels. They do in
>>> general not suffer from radiation damage at room temperature
>>> the way protein crystals do. Occasionally they are mounted in
>>> a capillary instead of simply glueing them to a goniometer if
>>> they are air sensitive. In principle freezing should not
>>> damage the crystals, but one still may have to be carefull if
>>> the crystals are large. I think you risk increasing
>>> mosiacity, and any manipulation that is not needed will on
>>> average only reduce the quality of the specimen rather than improve
>>> it
>>>
>>>     Remy Loris
>>>     Vrije Univesiteit Brussel
>>>
>>>     Jayashankar wrote:
>>>
>>>             Dear Scientists and Friends,
>>>             I am not sure, whether  organic crystals  need
>>> to be in cryo stream necessarily during data  collection from
>>> an  in house
>>>             xray machine .
>>>             How most of the organic crystals have been
>>> solved mostly?
>>>             --
>>>             S.Jayashankar
>>>             (A bit confused new generation researcher).
>>>             Research Student
>>>             Institute for Biophysical Chemistry
>>>             Hannover Medical School
>>>             Germany
>>>
>>>
>>> Harry
>>> --
>>> Dr Harry Powell, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, MRC
>>> Centre, Hills Road, Cambridge, CB2 2QH
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
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> * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
> Diana R. Tomchick
> Associate Professor
> University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
> Department of Biochemistry
> 5323 Harry Hines Blvd.
> Rm. ND10.214B
> Dallas, TX 75390-8816, U.S.A.
> Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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