Freezing

Based on an activity in 'Data logging in Practice'

When it is icy they put salt onto the roads to melt the ice. What the salt does is to depress, or reduce, the freezing point of water. The result is that the ice on the road melts more easily. (That's really clear?). Anyway, I reckoned that if there's any truth in this, it means that if ice freezes at zero deg. Celsius, then salty water must freeze at a temperature somewhere below this.

My experiment

I put temperature probes into each of three ice-lolly pots in the freezer. One had 20 cm3 of water, one had 20 cm3 of salty water (brine) and one just had air. I closed the freezer door, and got a data logger to take temperature readings overnight.

My results

The graph shows the readings from three temperature probes: one placed in water, another in brine and another in the freezer itself. After a whole night in the freezer, the water had frozen solid but the salt water (the brine) was still slightly slushy. Here's the graph...*

Freezer graph - worth seeing really

The bumpy graphs are not due to a fault or sudden changes in temperature - it's a common picture due to a mysterious thing called 'noise'. Appreciate that these temperature probes are only supposed to work down to minus 10 degrees. The results from the graph above are available as a file. Use the Freezing water results file in your data logging or spreadsheet software to find out:

Work this out

  • What is the normal, steady temperature of the freezer?
  • After starting the experiment and closing the door of the freezer how long did the freezer take to get back to its normal temperature?
  • Which graph trace is which? Remember that one temperature probe was placed in water, another in brine and another in the freezer itself.
  • What does the freezing point of water appear to be? Can you explain that result?
  • What can you say about the freezing point of brine?
  • If you know a bit about depression of freezing point and latent heat you might be able to say why the graphs are shaped as they are.

What you might find out

  • How is the freezing point of water affected by orange juice?
  • What is the freezing point of ice cream? Is there any truth in the idea that oily foods do not freeze very easily?
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