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Don't say it's because it's way in the back by the vent... no, no... it's right up front next to the bottled water and milk.
I can't figure it out... any ideas? It was a full gallon jug frozen SOLID!
This link might help, or maybe not...
[misterguch.brinkster.net...]
Alcohol might work - in small quantity so you don't get too worse for wear on it. I'm not sure how it mixes with tea though, or if it would just float to the top?
TJ
From Grandpa's reading:
Strong Kool Aid freezes at a lower temperature than weak Kool Aid
Still really curious of the freezing issue. Maybe it has something to do with the specific gravity of the liquid after the tea is added... I don't know.
Would also be curious to know if the alcohol works. Not for myself, however, since I a tee-totaler :) But for reference..
Should be interesting results, but as for exactly what is going on... I still might not know conclusively. Oh well, it'll be a fun experiment.
emulsification
Maybe you mean solution. An emulsion is basically oil combined with water. Like margerine.
Milk freezes lower than tea because it has lactose in it. It will freeze but at a lower temperature. Carbonated sweet drinks are designed to be liquid below the freezing point of water. This is so you can drink them very cold. Similar to beer in some respects as it contains small amount of Glycol (anti freeze).
You are right sbout the solution thing tho. Certain solubles in tea will freeze at a temp above that of water.
I belive tannin solution will freeze above the point that water will.
I dunno
Ska
That could be quite a serindipitous discovery!
Well, this [odur.let.rug.nl] happened in Winter and I see no evidence of ice-skaters on the stamps ;-)
TJ
I do have a solution to the problem, pardon the pun. ;) They're called curtain climbers, rug-rats, grub snatchers, etc. The addition of two of the aforementioned to your environment will ensure that no liquids remain in a refrigeration device long enough to get cold, let alone freeze.
The fact that the structure of ice means that it takes up more space than liquid water ( normally if you reduce the amount of motion or vibration at atomic level you make the volume occupied smaller ) is already an anomally ...
You might try adding a sprig or two of fresh peppermint ..that should make it freeze at the same temp as normal water ...
The addition of two of the aforementioned [kids] to your environment will ensure that no liquids remain in a refrigeration device long enough to get cold, let alone freeze.
The experiment has begun. I've got six of the same containers (similar to the one that froze before), one with plain water, one with STRONG tea, one with weak tea one with a different brand of tea, one with a little salt and one with sugar. I'm going to try to remember to take a temperature hourly as well as note weather or not they are freezing.
Should have results by the weekend's end. (weekendend? ;) )
weekendend?Sunday night/Monday morning.
Looking ahead, if they all freeze have we learned anything? And what if none of them freeze? In either case it might be best to turn it over to a high-schooler as a science fair project. Here's hoping it doesn't go that far.....
Personally, I don't plan on doing anything else until the results are in.
And what if none of them freeze?
LOL... that's EXACTLY what happened. All of them were still liquid and all of them the same temperature. Maybe it's got something to do with the quantities. My wife wouldn't allow 5 gallons worth of different liquids in the fridge, so I scaled down a lot.
Unless someone has better luck... I'll have to wait until my 16 month old is ready for a science fair...
For example pure water freezes at one temperature. Pure anti-freeze freezes at a lower one. Combine the two and the freezing point lowers even farther. There is an optimal ratio of water to antifreeze that achieves the lowest possible freezing point.
For all you nitpickers and physics majors, yes inside of a cars cooling system pressure plays a role, but it also complicates grasping the concept of a solution.
while mowing the yard
With so much theory and conjecture, some of it probably right, we're stuck with not knowing for sure. SEOMike I'll be taking your question out into the world and when I do find a definitive answer you will be the first to know. Somebody's gotta have an idea