“…The hydrophilic chains in the hydrogels can provide opportunities for hydrogen bonding of water to suppress freezing, but the effect is limited to relatively small amounts of water and supercoolings of 10–20 K. , The inclusion of hydrophobic nanodomains through the supramolecular assembly of hydrophobes in hydrogels based on copolymers of N,N-dimethylacrylamide- stat -2-(N-ethylperfluorooctane sulfonamido)ethyl acrylate (DMA/FOSA) provides a more robust soft confining environment, which leads to inhibition of up to 45 wt % of the absorbed water in the hydrogel from freezing . However, irrespective of the hydrogel examined, the maximum nonfrozen water content reported in these hydrogel materials has been quite limited. − ,,,− Concentrated protein and polymer solutions, including coacervates, can also provide environments to produce significant quantities of nonfreezing water. − For the coacervates, the nonfrozen water fraction dramatically increases in comparison to that for analogous concentrated polymer/protein solutions (∼60% vs ∼10%) . In this case, the increased nonfrozen water is attributed to increased water–polymer/protein contacts, but the average separation between the polymer and protein was estimated at 1–2 nm.…”