In terms of first aid, a cold pack is used to prevent swelling. It's especially useful on sprained muscles, and is sometimes used on tooth aches. On long term injuries, it is often alternated with hot packs. Answer sprains and pulls of the muscle and joints
An ice pack or gel pack is a plastic sac ofice, refrigerant gel or liquid, or, in an emergency, even frozen vegetables. The refrigerant, usually non-toxic, can absorb a considerable amount of heat, since its enthalpy of fusion is high. It is commonly used as a cold compress to alleviate the pain of minor injuries or in coolers orinsulated shipping containers to keep products cool during transport. The simplest type of ice pack is simply a sack, bag or towel filled with cubed or crushed ice.
Ice packs are used in coolers to keep perishable foods (especially meats, dairy products, eggs, etc.) below the 41-165 °F (5-74 °C) danger zone when outside a refrigerator or freezer. If the foods and the ice packs are placed in a cooler directly from the freezer, then the equivalent of 10 to 20 pounds of ice is needed for each 24 hour period.[citation needed] If the foods start off warmer (for example, non-frozen food from a refrigerator), they will not be able to remain safely cool for as long.
Water (ice) has an unusually high enthalpy of fusion and a convenient melting temperature (one accessible by household freezers). However it isn't ideal for ice packs for various reasons, so additives to improve the properties of water are often used. For example, substances can be added to prevent bacterial growth in the pack, as can additives that cause the water to remain a thick gel throughout use, instead of transitioning between a solid and a free-flowing liquid like plain water. These gel packs are often made of non-toxic materials that will not liquefy, and therefore will not spill easily or cause contamination if the container breaks. Gel packs may be made by addinghydroxyethyl cellulose (Cellusize)[1][2] orvinyl-coated silica gel.[3]
These gel packs, as with ice itself, are chilled before use. The gel-pack or water is placed in a freezer or other cooling system to lower its temperature, and then it is used to keep other items cool. Ice packs are effectively a device for storing cooling capacity.
Instant cold packs use an endothermic reaction to cool down quickly. These types of ice packs are stored at room temperature rather than needing to be physically cooled before use. When one breaks a tube inside the pack, two chemicals mix or react and absorb enough energy to produce a cooling effect. Common types include solid ammonium nitrate dissolving in water.[4][5]
The first hot and cold pack was introduced in 1948 with the name Hot-R-Cold-Pak and could be chilled in a refrigerator or heated in hot water. [6]
The first reusable hot cold pack that could be heated in boiling water or heated in a microwave was first patented [7] by Jacob Spencer of Nortech Labs in 1973 (Patent No. 3,780,537). Reusable hot cold packs differ from instant cold packs in that they can be either frozen or microwaved.
Cold packs are a category of therapeutic applications that are used deliver a comfortable and prolonged exposure to cold to a specific and isolated area of the body when in pain or injured. When a cold pack is used this way it is helpful in reducing pain and reducing inflammation.
Cold packs are normally made with ice inside a closed container, or the newer form of a gel material that can be reused by placing in a freezer.
The cold pack (Ice Pack as some call it), reduces the swelling if it appears after a fall or anything like that, or if you bang your head against something and a swelling appears.
Physiologically, an ice pack reduces internal hemmorhage by reducing the size of broken blood vessels due to trauma. Vasoconstriction occurs when you apply cold to an injured area and since blood isn't getting to the superficial skin nerve cells, it becomes numb after prolonged use.
Instant cold packs consist of two substances that are kept separate until they need to mix. In most cases they consist of some salt, such as ammonium nitrate, contained in an outer bag with water in an inner bag. Squeezing the pack breaks the inner bag, releasing the water, which dissolves the ammonium nitrate. This process absorbs heat, making the pack cold.
To decrease pain and inflammation. Put it on 15 min. every 1 to 2 hours. It will help.
Cold packs and ice bags are placed on a localized site and provide topical relief
soothing joint and muscle aches
Both types (hot and cold) of packs can be easily transported and used in travel. They do not take up a lot of room in a bag or box. If someone were to get hurt, a cold pack can quickly be used to help them. The same goes with a hot pack.
Yes, hot packs have exothermic reactions (the contents create heat) and cold packs have endothermic reactions (they require heat to occur, therefore making the surroundings colder). In hot packs its a reaction between water and a salt solution, and in cold packs its normally water and ammonium nitrate. peeace
According to the msds it should, if you can see 2640 written on it anywhere.
actually, you can.
The first of the instant cold packs was a liquid-type invented by Albert A. Robbins and patented August 11, 1959. Robbins' "Chemical Freezing Package" involved and outer pouch containing two separate compartments for water and ammonium nitrate that would mix and freeze when the user split a perforation between the two - say by hitting or snapping the package as we would with the modern variety. Robbins' patent was assigned to Kwik-Kold of America. Parent company Cardinal Health continues to market this, and the more recently invented gel-type cold packs, to this day.
The Squeeze - 2010 A Necessary Evil 1-2 was released on: USA: 7 March 2010
Ice packs keeps lunches cold.
You get ammonium ions (NH4+) and nitrate ions (NO3-) in solution. Also: It is also a common combination in cold packs. The Ammonium nitrate and the salt are in separate containers. When you squeeze the innermost container with the water in it, the two ingredients mix. As the Ammonium melts it gets cold.
No, they release energy.
Instant cold packs cannot be reused once they are activated. The chemical makeup inside the package was created for one time use.
Cold packs can be purchased at most big box stores such as Walmart or Target in their first aid section. They are commonly known as ice packs where one can either break the bag to make instant cold to treat injuries or they can be shaken to create the same effect.
streching or cold then hot packs
is there ammonium nitrate found in walgreens cold packs
Cold packs, for bruises are one invention.
inside most instant cold packs
Sponge baths, cold compresses, and cold packs are all wet cooling treatments
What exactly is it. I have never heard of this?