Submitted by UncommercializedKat t3_y7daqw in askscience
ECatPlay t1_isvib80 wrote
Sticking with nontoxic chemicals, several come to mind that could be used to significantly depress the freezing point of water in a bottled drink. Ethanol, of course, but that would affect the flavor and be intoxicating. Sugars dissolve well and will depress the freezing point but will also sweeten the drink, some more than others. Another carbohydrate, glycerin, will sweeten the drink too, but not by as much. And then there's propylene glycol, which is nontoxic, has only a slightly acrid taste, and is sometimes used as an antifreeze in brewing.
These aren't all equally effective. You can compare the wt% concentration necessary to drop the freezing point of water by a given amount, from a table of CONCENTRATIVE PROPERTIES OF AQUEOUS SOLUTIONS. I find, for example, that for a 1° C drop in freezing point it would take about: 2.5% ethanol, 4% propylene glycol, 5% glycerin, 9% D-glucose, or 15% sucrose. (Salt would only take 1.7 wt%.)
So glycerin would be the most effective of the these carbohydrates, and least sweetening. And propylene glycol would be effective with minimal affect on taste.
ArtesianDiff t1_isvr6a9 wrote
Would glycerin also work for lowering the freezing point of a solid? For instance, cherries in ice cream. Alcohol is used to keep them from freezing hard in some adult ice creams, but an alternative for children sounds interesting.
ECatPlay t1_isvrxgl wrote
Theoretically yes, but you'd have to get twice as much in, and I'm not sure it would permeate into the cherry as easily as alcohol.
ArtesianDiff t1_isvw1lh wrote
Interesting, thank you.
UncommercializedKat OP t1_isvzw1d wrote
Thanks for the info!
Chu_BOT t1_isw1tay wrote
I'm very curious why you're asking this. It seems oddly specific, like you're trying to play a prank.
You might consider supercooling depending on what your exact needs are:
You can end up with a liquid at a temperature lower than normal without any chemical changes.
But I do think there might be options besides freezing point depression if you give more detail about the expected outcome instead of just the method you're asking about.
UncommercializedKat OP t1_iswacrk wrote
No pranks. I have an idea for a consumer product and I'm researching the viability.
What I'm looking for is to make a sports drink that would be resistant to freezing. I don't have a specific temperature in mind, although it would be really great if it could be kept from freezing in a normal household freezer (0F or -18C).
Cost, taste, and food safety are all vital so I'm not sure how low it could feasibility go. I've heard that Gatorade freezes at 18F (-8C) but haven't done any experimenting.
CausinACommotion t1_iswtt7r wrote
Gastrointestinal problems might be real concern, when you start adding additives to reduce the freezing point. Osmotic diarrhoea is a nasty thing.
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