This looks like fraud. It must be a solutin of Sodium Acetate made in hot water. like in handwarmer bags. When the fluid cools down its content remains soluted until it is disturbed with friction. You can see it "freezes" after the first realy wild movements. It is an exothermic reaction and the bottle is now warm for an hour or so. The man in the video does not bather telling us. Sodium Acetate is to be gotten on the internet easily and can be used over and over again to play with. I do not know about the side-effects, read: dangers.
Some Jabronie | Fri, 03/21/2008 - 00:10
that's called supercooling. The water in the bottle undergoes a rapid and significant drop in temperature allowing the water to remain so at temperatures below the normal freezing point. In short, the water was already below freezing, and the action of shaking the water caused it to instantly freeze.
Some Jabronie | Sat, 03/15/2008 - 08:29
It's simple chemistry. It's at just the right temperature that the pressure of the contents of the bottle are keeping it warm enough that it's a liquid, but when it's released, the pressure goes down and it freezes. Pretty neat to watch, though :)
Some Jabronie | Sat, 03/01/2008 - 06:48
it's just experienced supercooling. You can do it once in awhile with water bottles in your freezer
Some Jabronie | Fri, 01/25/2008 - 05:15
obviously gelatin.
Some Jabronie | Tue, 12/18/2007 - 17:59
I have done that with my water sometimes, leaving it in m car half full in the cold. go out the next day and open it up, once I guess the oxygen reaches it is just freezes, it is not solid though, more of a thick slush.
This looks like fraud. It must be a solutin of Sodium Acetate made in hot water. like in handwarmer bags. When the fluid cools down its content remains soluted until it is disturbed with friction. You can see it "freezes" after the first realy wild movements. It is an exothermic reaction and the bottle is now warm for an hour or so. The man in the video does not bather telling us. Sodium Acetate is to be gotten on the internet easily and can be used over and over again to play with. I do not know about the side-effects, read: dangers.
that's called supercooling. The water in the bottle undergoes a rapid and significant drop in temperature allowing the water to remain so at temperatures below the normal freezing point. In short, the water was already below freezing, and the action of shaking the water caused it to instantly freeze.
It's simple chemistry. It's at just the right temperature that the pressure of the contents of the bottle are keeping it warm enough that it's a liquid, but when it's released, the pressure goes down and it freezes. Pretty neat to watch, though :)
it's just experienced supercooling. You can do it once in awhile with water bottles in your freezer
obviously gelatin.
I have done that with my water sometimes, leaving it in m car half full in the cold. go out the next day and open it up, once I guess the oxygen reaches it is just freezes, it is not solid though, more of a thick slush.
that's not ice, it's gel.