The nucleation of ice from aqueous solutions is a process essential to myriad environmental and industrial processes, but the physical factors affecting the capacity of different solutes to depress the homogeneous nucleation temperature of ice are yet poorly understood. In this work, we demonstrate that for many binary aqueous solutions of non-ionic solutes, this depression is dominated by the entropy of the liquid phase. Employing the classic Turnbull interpretation of the interfacial free energy γ∼TSliquid-Ssolid and estimating solution entropies with a Flory-style modification of the ideal entropy of mixing that accounts for solute size effects, we demonstrate that mixing entropy alone predicts experimental homogeneous nucleation temperatures across a wide variety of non-ionic solutions. We anticipate that this physical insight will not only enhance a fundamental understanding of homogeneous nucleation processes across fields but also open new avenues to the rational design of aqueous solutions for desired nucleation behaviors.
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