Our understanding of life and technology at extreme temperatures could become clearer thanks to a microfluidic device that studies ice formation. The new instrument studies ice formation in supercooled water George Whitesides, at Harvard University, Cambridge, US, and colleagues have developed a microfluidic device that produces supercooled water drops (droplets that remain liquid below 0 °C) and measures the temperature at which ice nucleates in them. The device is two orders of magnitude faster that current state-of-the-art ice nucleation instruments and very accurate, claims the team.Ice nucleation controls water's freezing process. Studying how water behaves is important for our comprehension...