How can ice cool an alcoholic drink below 0°C?

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In summary, the temperature of the ice and the drink will meet at a temperature in between their initial temperatures. The amount of ice and the specific heat capacity of the ice do not affect this equilibrium temperature. The process of ice melting does not make the ice colder, but rather the warmest parts of the ice melt, leaving behind cooler parts. This can result in the final temperature being colder than the initial temperature of either the ice or the drink. The only factor that affects the final temperature is the freezing point of the drink.
  • #141
Intresting said:
Hence I stand by my first response. The question is moot sir.
Let me explain the reality of the situation to you. You have 6 Physics Forums Mentors (Nugatory, Russ Watters, Dr. Claude, Drakith, mfb, Chestermiller) with over 100 years of combined experience and with both experimental results and theoretical modeling calculations to back them up arguing one way, and then there is little ol' you, with not equations, no calculations, no cited literature, and no experiments arguing the opposite way. Do you really think that what you are saying can be given credibility by those reading this thread?

Now, if you have any specific criticisms of what Russ did in his experiments or what I did in my thermodynamic modeling analysis, let's hear them.
 
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  • #142
I have difficulty believing this thread.

It is a simple problem:

There exists something called energy. It is neither created nor destroyed. (For purposes of this discussion we will neglect mass-energy transitions.)

Adding energy to a system will raise the temperature. Taking it away will lower the temperature (again neglecting irrelevant exceptions).

The phase transition from solid and liquid also takes energy. It gives energy the other way around. This energy is called the heat of fusion.

Water ice freezes at 0º C. A water/alcohol mixture freezes at a much lower temperature.

So adding the mixture to ice melts the ice taking energy which must come from somewhere.

Under some circumstances the only place for it to come from is the water/alcohol mixture. Under other circumstances it could come from other places, but the OP question was, "Can this happen?", i.e. are there any circumstances? The answer is yes.

The heat of fusion of the ice is stolen from the drink, potentially making it colder than 0ºC.

As others have pointed out, ice cream was made this way (using salt, not alcohol) for centuries. This isn't new or disputed science. It's something everyone in the world with ice, salt, and a thermometer can check for themselves.

Get a thermometer. Go to a bar. Buy a drink. Isn't science tasty.
 
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  • #143
Jeff Rosenbury said:
This isn't new or disputed science. It's something everyone in the world with ice, salt, and a thermometer can check for themselves.

Get a thermometer. Go to a bar. Buy a drink. Isn't science tasty.
Still, 142 posts ( 143 inclusive ) on the subject.
Freezing point depression is a mis-understood phenomena, both by beginers and the well-heeled.
Probably because it is mostly described as a laboratory demonstration starting from a mixture at a temperature, and then cooling the mixture and noticing the formation of cyrtals forming at a subdued temperature from the pure solvent.
 
  • #144
Jeff Rosenbury said:
I have difficulty believing this thread.

What do you mean? The consensus of those doing the math and the experiments in this thread agree with you. The temperature of the mixture will drop.
 
  • #145
Drakkith said:
What do you mean? The consensus of those doing the math and the experiments in this thread agree with you. The temperature of the mixture will drop.
I think he's expressing surprise at the level of incredulity.
 
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  • #146
russ_watters said:
I think he's expressing surprise at the level of incredulity.

Well butter my biscuit... :rolleyes:
 
  • #147
Jeff Rosenbury said:
I have difficulty believing this thread.

It is a simple problem:

There exists something called energy. It is neither created nor destroyed. (For purposes of this discussion we will neglect mass-energy transitions.)

Adding energy to a system will raise the temperature. Taking it away will lower the temperature (again neglecting irrelevant exceptions).

The phase transition from solid and liquid also takes energy. It gives energy the other way around. This energy is called the heat of fusion.

Water ice freezes at 0º C. A water/alcohol mixture freezes at a much lower temperature.

So adding the mixture to ice melts the ice taking energy which must come from somewhere.

Under some circumstances the only place for it to come from is the water/alcohol mixture. Under other circumstances it could come from other places, but the OP question was, "Can this happen?", i.e. are there any circumstances? The answer is yes.

The heat of fusion of the ice is stolen from the drink, potentially making it colder than 0ºC.

As others have pointed out, ice cream was made this way (using salt, not alcohol) for centuries. This isn't new or disputed science. It's something everyone in the world with ice, salt, and a thermometer can check for themselves.

Get a thermometer. Go to a bar. Buy a drink. Isn't science tasty.
Jeff,

I'm impressed by your perceptiveness, and your ability to recognize the solution to this "obvious" (to you) problem. Unfortunately, it was not so obvious to naive me (and many other mere mortals). At least at the beginning, it wasn't obvious to me that, as the ice melted, its temperature would be dropping.

When you made your knowledgeable pronouncement, were you aware that solutions of ethanol and water are highly non-ideal, and that the enthalpy of these solutions is a complicated non-linear function of the mole fraction of ethanol and temperature? Had you ever seen a diagram of the excess molar enthalpy HE vs temperature and mole fraction, and had you taken the behavior shown in these diagrams into account quantitatively when you made your pronouncement?
 
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  • #148
Two words: "Apple jack."
 
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  • #149
Chestermiller said:
Jeff,

I'm impressed by your perceptiveness, and your ability to recognize the solution to this "obvious" (to you) problem. Unfortunately, it was not so obvious to naive me (and many other mere mortals). At least at the beginning, it wasn't obvious to me that, as the ice melted, its temperature would be dropping.

When you made your knowledgeable pronouncement, were you aware that solutions of ethanol and water are highly non-ideal, and that the enthalpy of these solutions is a complicated non-linear function of the mole fraction of ethanol and temperature? Had you ever seen a diagram of the excess molar enthalpy HE vs temperature and mole fraction, and had you taken the behavior shown in these diagrams into account quantitatively when you made your pronouncement?
I'm sorry, I woke up in a bad mood. I should have been more polite. Perhaps I should have done the experiment before posting (though posting while drunk has other problems).
 
  • #150
Chestermiller said:
it was not so obvious to naive me (and many other mere mortals).

Bystander said:
Two words: "Apple jack."
Okay, maybe it is one word ... Chet, chemical engineers are supposed to know these things.
 
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  • #151
Bystander said:
Okay, maybe it is one word ... Chet, chemical engineers are supposed to know these things.
Ouch!
 
  • #152
A few additional tests:

Iceinabag.jpg


Drink.jpg


Freezer-badmug.jpg


Freezer-goodmug.jpg
 
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  • #153
Chestermiller said:
Unfortunately, it was not so obvious to naive me (and many other mere mortals). At least at the beginning, it wasn't obvious to me that, as the ice melted, its temperature would be dropping.
I don't mean to belabour this, but it does seem to be a blind spot in common physics/thermo training. What happens to liquid water exposed to the air (wet bulb temp, evaporative cooling) is not a very different concept, and is discussed in quite a bit of detail in the courses I took. But mixtures of ice and liquids are not discussed (that I can recall). Per Bystander's point, my first exposure to it was on the practical side, making homemade iced cream with my grandparents. So it was something I took for granted long before I had any understanding of why it happened.

Even still, the mechanism behind how a solid block of ice can be melted by cold salt (for example) is tricky...even if we do see it every winter on the roads.
 
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  • #154
Chestermiller said:
I completed a calculation with the heat of mixing effect included. The heat of mixing data was somewhat incomplete, and I had to use my best judgment at filling in the blanks. The initial state was a mixture of 44 g EtOH, 56 g water at 20 C, and 150 g ice at 0 C.

As best I could estimate, the final state was a mixture of 44g EtOH, 146 g water, and 60 g ice, all at -14 C.

[previous, without mixing]
Initial state:
100 gm alcohol/water solution, 44% alcohol mass percent at 20 C
100 gm ice at 0 C

Final State:
155 gm alcohol/water solution, 28% alcohol at -18 C
45 gm ice at -18 C
Thanks. You started with more ice when you included the heat of mixing so I can't compare it exactly, but it looks the impact of the heat of mixing was pretty small. That, I expected. What I didn't expect was how much ice was melting and as a result, how much dilution there was. Of course, I also didn't look up the freezing point of ethanol prior to starting to make predictions...
 
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  • #155
Bystander said:
No one's made ice cream?!
That's the key. Those of us who got to make made ice cream when we were kids are familiar with process. In that case it was ice and salt - to generate the extra cold conditions needed to get the mixture to form ice cream.

I think the clearest situation is when both the ice and the alcohol start out at the same temperature. Assuming that the alcohol is 200 proof, any temperature above the freezing point of alcohol and cold enough for ice will work

The alcohol has an affinity for water, and dissolves the ice - forcing into a liquid phase and chilling the entire system.

I don't believe the equilibrium condition has been fully explored. In final equilibrium there will be a liquid alcohol/water mix and a solid alcohol/water mix, and those alcohol/water ratios will not be the same. And, of course, the temperature will be the same throughout.
 
  • #156
.Scott said:
I don't believe the equilibrium condition has been fully explored. In final equilibrium there will be a liquid alcohol/water mix and a solid alcohol/water mix
If you look at post #70 in this thread, DrStupid alludes to fractional crystalization. The frozen material will be pure water.
 
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  • #158
jbriggs444 said:
If you look at post #70 in this thread, DrStupid alludes to fractional crystalization.
That's the "jacking," a popular separation method used in the past. History of science is another hobby of mine --- didn't think this was that forgotten, but that's what I get for thinking and chewing gum.
 
  • #159
.Scott said:
I don't believe the equilibrium condition has been fully explored. In final equilibrium there will be a liquid alcohol/water mix and a solid alcohol/water mix, and those alcohol/water ratios will not be the same. And, of course, the temperature will be the same throughout.
I agree with jbriggs444 in post #163 on this. Apparently you hadn't actually seen the phase diagram for EtOH/water when you made this statement.

Have you considered doing some modeling calculations to more fully explore the final equilibrium condition for various initial states? Why don't you run some quantitative cases where you start out with 200 proof alcohol to see how the results compare? That would be pretty interesting.
 
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  • #160
I think of it backward. (for me that comes natural )

We usually think of ice warming up to its melting point which we all know is 32F..
But what happens is ,
The drink cools down to its freezing point...
A good Gin & Tonic will frost the glass
 
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  • #161
jim hardy said:
I think of it backward. (for me that comes natural )

We usually think of ice warming up to its melting point which we all know is 32F..
But what happens is ,
The drink cools down to its freezing point...
A good Gin & Tonic will frost the glass

I can remember making Ice cream as a kid and we had this electric churn, it would spin in the ice bucket with the cream mixture inside and we'd always lay a towel over the top thinking it would get colder faster. You could remove the towel and see frozen condensation (frost) on the top of the spinning cream container above the salt/ice line, and this would be in the middle of the summer.
 
  • #162
How can ice cool an alcoholic drink below 0°C? Answer: When the ice is massive enough and cold enough to bring the beverage from its present temperature to a temperature below 0°C. Remember, the quality of the answer is based on the quality of the question.
 
  • #163
Jon B said:
]How can ice cool an alcoholic drink below 0°C? Answer: When the ice is massive enough and cold enough to bring the beverage from its present temperature to a temperature below 0°C. Remember, the quality of the answer is based on the quality of the question.
So, are you saying that the ice has to start out below 0 C?
 
  • #164
Jon B said:
How can ice cool an alcoholic drink below 0°C? Answer: When the ice is massive enough and cold enough to bring the beverage from its present temperature to a temperature below 0°C. Remember, the quality of the answer is based on the quality of the question.
The ice does not have to be cold enough, that's the main result we established over the last pages. It can start at 0°C.
 
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