Yes. If you place it in a bowl of ice. You must then pour salt all over the ice. This will result in the soda being below 32 degress, but still being liquid.
Gilroy Harrison has written: 'The dynamic properties of supercooled liquids' -- subject(s): Supercooled liquids
Mercury is the supercooled liquid. This means it remains in liquid form even at temperatures below its freezing point due to its unique properties. Teflon, glass, and ice cream are not supercooled liquids.
To create a supercooled solution using ice water and salt, you can mix salt into the ice water to lower its freezing point. This will allow the solution to become supercooled, meaning it remains in a liquid state below its normal freezing point.
Some liquids that can be supercooled include water, acetone, and ethanol. These liquids can be cooled below their normal freezing point without solidifying if they are kept free of impurities and disturbance.
Water that stays liquid at temperatures below freezing is called supercooled water. This phenomenon occurs when the water is kept in a very pure state and is cooled slowly below its freezing point without forming ice crystals.
William Phillips discovered supercooling in Pennsylvania
A supercooled solution is a liquid that has been cooled below its normal freezing point without solidifying. This can occur when the solution lacks impurities or nucleation sites for crystal formation. Upon disturbance or introduction of a nucleation site, the solution rapidly solidifies into a crystal.
The vapor pressure of supercooled water is higher than that of ice at the same temperature due to the increased mobility of water molecules in the liquid state compared to the solid state. As a result, supercooled water is more likely to evaporate and exert a higher vapor pressure than ice.
The growth of ice crystals in clouds from supercooled water.
The growth of ice crystals in clouds from supercooled water.
supercooled
Glass is normally a solid. It does not have a supercooled liquid phase because to be supercooled it must go well below its freezing point. glass is the silicates of sodium or potassium and calcium these units are linked together as water molecule in ice, and glass do not has a sharp melting point but a range of temperature in which it becomes soft and finally decomposes the temperature at which glass starts softning is known as its softning point during softning process it behaves as ice melts so it is supposed to be a supercooled liquid.