HK911
- 10
- 0
Question: What is the best way to melt ice?
The discussion centers around methods to melt ice quickly within a two-minute timeframe, specifically in an indoor environment at room temperature. Participants explore various techniques that rely solely on conduction and convection, avoiding the use of chemicals or external heating sources.
Participants express differing views on the role of pressure in melting ice, with no consensus on whether increasing or decreasing pressure is more effective. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the best method to achieve the goal within the constraints provided.
Participants note limitations such as the inability to use external heating sources or chemicals, and the requirement that ice must be crushed during the experiment rather than beforehand.
This discussion may be of interest to individuals involved in experimental physics, engineering projects related to thermal dynamics, or anyone exploring practical applications of heat transfer principles.
Lojzek said:No, pressure should be increased to melt ice. But I calculated this effect is to weak to achive impressing results: about 5*10^-5 of the mass of ice will melt for each bar of pressure increase.
This metod would make sense only if we were limited to very short times.
TeTeC said:I cannot show that increasing pressure will work better than decreasing pressure, but I can explain why increasing pressure leads to melting :
http://www.bae.uky.edu/~snokes/BAE549thermo/gasesv1.jpg"
You can see on this diagram that when you are bellow the triple point temperature and around the 1 kPa, increasing the pressure will lead to melting. But it only works for water.
As I've said, I don't know which way is the fastest.
Schrödinger's Dog said:Ok why would increasing pressure work better than decreasing pressure and heating? Not sure I get that?
HK911 said:Thank you very much for the comments. Changing the pressure would be best, but unfortunately, we can't use any external source. The only external sources we can use are the room temperature and gravity for instance.
billiards said:Water (H2O) is unusual in that the solid phase is less dense than the liquid phase, hence ice floats on water - a rare physical property which actually is essential for life as we know it*.
This relates to the fact that under typical surface conditions (i.e. what might be considered normal pressures and temperatures at the surface of a planet) H2O has a negative Clapeyron slope - that basically means that the melting temperature goes down as the pressure is increased. Consider this: imagine you had a body of water all at the same temperature, from experience we know that the ice will form at the surface of the water (I guess we have to be careful here - maybe that happens because the air above the surface is colder, but I believe in laboratories we can control the conditions and can convince ourselves that it is not because of the colder air at the surface); now where is the pressure the greatest? Of course, the pressure is greatest at the bottom of the water because it has a load of water on top of it, but the ice doesn't form at the bottom - the ice forms at the top where the pressure is lowest. So does this not mean that water has a higher freezing point at lower pressures?
That's my understanding anyway.
*If ice was denser than water then the oceans would have completely frozen, because there wouldn't have been an insulating cap of ice at the top to stop all the water from getting very cold (and then freezing solid), life needs liquid water, ergo, if the oceans were frozen we wouldn't have life.