Coke physics (ice and pressure)

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Leaving Coke in the freezer can prevent it from freezing due to the pressure inside the bottle, which inhibits the formation of ice crystals. When the cap is unscrewed, the sudden drop in pressure allows the liquid to freeze instantly. The discussion explores how increasing pressure can lower the freezing point of water, with references to phase diagrams indicating that water can remain liquid at temperatures as low as -42°C under certain conditions. The pressure in soda bottles, around 300 kPa, may not significantly alter the freezing point, but it can still affect the state of the liquid. Overall, the unique properties of Coke, primarily its water content, demonstrate similar behavior to pure water regarding freezing under pressure.
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Funny thing just happened. I left my coke in the freezer, expecting the bottle to be busted I found that it wasn't even frozen at all. Liquid all the way through. Figured it was that new fake sugar chemical, but when I unscrewed the cap it instantly turned to ice.

So I guess you can prevent water from freezing if you have enough pressure on it, by preventing it from expanding it doesn't crystallize.

How cold can you get water in this case without turning it to ice? As cold as you want?

Or does the water stop releasing heat.
 
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I don't know if anybody's ever figured out the phase diagram for Coke :) but it sounds like it has the same "backwards" property that water has (that increasing pressure will keep it as a liquid in colder temperatures), which makes sense, since it's mostly water.

400px-Water_phase_diagram.svg.png


and see:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Properties_of_water

Pressure on the Y scale, temperature on the X scale), we're normally at about 10^5 Pa pressure, showing that the freezing point is normally around 273K, but the freezing point drops lower as the pressure increases.
 
Is it possible to get it down to 1 degree Kelvin without freezing? It looks like from the charter there that there is a limit.
 
DaleSwanson said:
It seems soda has about 300kPa, which doesn't seem like it would significantly change the freezing point.
http://hypertextbook.com/facts/2000/SeemaMeraj.shtml

Perhaps some of the coke froze, expanded, and increased the interior pressure enough to lower the freezing point...?
 
I think they pressurize the bottle when they pack it. So there was no way for it to expand in the first place. It was diet so there was no sugar in it, it's basically just flavored water.
 
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