Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
Freezing water
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Not an expert, and have been wrong many times on here but:
water under pressure needs to be colder than 0 to freeze (i think). If by removing the bottle from the freezer you removed some pressure (something resting on bottle, possibly allowed bottle to expand a bit) it is then possible for the water to freeze... Never seen it happen, but in my limited mind it may just be possible.
Then it is one of the following reasons:
1: I would think the pressures involved would be considerable and the heat from your hand would cause more expansion than the pressure you could appy.
2: You should go and have your name legally changed to Ice Man.
3: I am not smart enough to answer your question.
I am sure CT will appear and give a reasonable answer sooner or later, he seems like an inteligent chap.
mrbatfink, you are saying that by heating the bottle, it expands and therefore pressure decreases ...
what is the missing link between "heating" and "expanding" ? could that be an increase in pressure, by any chance?
Now, the answer to the question:
supercooling
Look up that word in google or wikipedia.
In aviation, my profession for many years, airframe icing in flight is always a concern. There are several types of icing, but the most insidious is the formation of 'clear ice'. This occurs when supercooled small water droplets are suspended in cloud formations. The aircraft flies through them and when they are struck by the aircraft, immediately freeze or, worse, flow back along the wing for a short distance and freeze, forming an ice "dam". Fortunately, since the water is in a liquid state it does "paint" on radar whereas snow does not...
Space your answer is none to clear to me....
The water cannot freeze till the pressure is off of it. if you increase pressure it cannot freeze. Therefor there must be a decrease of pressure within the bottle.
if we are on about the pressure to expand the bottle it is already there in the form of the water trying to freeze. The bottle tries to shrink as it cools, so naturally it expands as it warms.. decreasing the pressure on the water.
please mrbatfink do a bit of research before writing "there must be". You are making a hypothesis, nothing more, you even admitted yourself that you couldn't answer the question.
Did you find the wikipedia definition unclear?
What about this page
http://f0rked.com/articles/supercooling
? It's easy to search on the internet when you know what keyword to look for.
Good job Clanad is here and loves to write it all himself in his own words...
I see now my mistake.
Could not read you link space as i am at work and use IE which the site does not support, but i did look elsewhere. My comment that water cannot freeze under certain pressures is correct, water expands when it freezes if it cannot expand it cannot freeze.
My mistake would be assuming there was enough pressure to stop freezing at 0C in the 1st place.
cheers guys
OK, how about this for a theory. In your freezer, the air will contract after you've opened the door to put something in, then closed it. Therefore the bottle will have less pressure on the outside so it expands. The air pressure on the water in the bottle is now greater than outside the freezer. The water cools under pressure to about 0 degrees C. In the atmosphere, as air expands it cools and then falls. This is the principle behind radiator in your house. Once you take the bottle out of the freezer, the temperature increases quickly and the pressure changes, then the bottle expands quickly. This causes the temperature of the water to drop, quickly, thus freeze. (Probably not all the way through to the middle).
Does this make sense to scientists? If not I wrote it after 3 beers, and I will be prepared to amend it in the morning. CT
Bert, the following article is from an MSNBC site, but repeated in many other places, including IBWA (International Bottled Water Assn.)
Purified Water:
Water that has been produced by distillation, deionization, reverse osmosis or other suitable processes and that meets the definition of purified water in the United States Pharmacopoeia (pharmacological code) may be labeled as purified bottled water. Other suitable product names for bottled water treated by one of the above processes may include "distilled water" if it is produced by distillation, "deionized water" if the water is produced by deionization, or "reverse osmosis water" if the process used is reverse osmosis. Alternatively "_____________ drinking water" can be used with the blank being filled in with one of the terms defined in this paragraph (e.g. "purified drinking water" or "distilled drinking water"). These waters are taken primarily from metropolitan water sources, run through mammoth commercial filters, and purified of chlorines, detritus, and other items inappropriate for drinking water. You may have seen vending machines outside of your supermarket that allows you to fill your own bottle for 25 or 50 cents; this is the water and process that is used and is from metropolitan sources or even the tap water adjacent to the machine�s location. They are excellent to cook with when tap water quality is an issue.
The article concludes that, in the U.S., between 30 and 35 percent of bottled water falls in this category. I see in the U.K. many advertisements for distilled water or other such equivalent treatments... Check the label on your next bottle of water and watch for the key words "purified"... by the way, I think I actually said "a lot of"... not "most"...