No because a solid cannot be frozen unless covered in ice.
i would opt for the Freezing point. salt decreases the freezing point of water. so if water would normally freeze at 0C, saltwater would freeze at -3C.
The freezing point of co2 is -78.5When studying chemistry, it is important to know the freezing point of things that may be handled. The Freezing point of Carbon Dioxide is -108.4 degrees Fahrenheit.
Lowering the freezing point simply means that you have done something to whatever you want to freeze (or don't want to freeze), so that a lower temperature is needed to make it freeze. For instance, adding salt to water lowers it's freezing point (which is normally 32 degrees Fahrenheit). That's why salting a sidewalk or roadway makes the ice melt under normal winter conditions. You can also lower the freezing point of water by adding alcohol or propylene glycol (automotive antifreeze).
Methanol will freeze at negative 143 (Fahrenheit)/ negative 97 (Celsius). If it is added to water (freezing point of 32*F/0*C) then it will make the water freeze at a lower temperature. So yes, methanol will lower the freezing point of any liquid that freezes at a higher temperature than methanol. But methanol cannot lower the freezing point of any liquid that will still be liquid at -143*F/-97*C.
Rock salt is simply a naturally occuring compound of sodium chloride (the same stuff that is in the shaker on your table). Already a solid, it doesn't really have a freezing point. In a solution of 23% by weight in water, the freezing point is -21.12 oC.
it does have a freezing point it just contains a chemical that makes it hard to freeze
water will freeze when it is at its freezing point which is 0 degrees
The freezing point of mercury is -38,829 0C.
Adding salt to water will lower the freezing point, thus requiring the salt water to get colder before it will freeze - it thus takes longer to freeze because it takes additional time to cool from the normal freezing point on down to the new (colder) freezing point.
A wrench has no freezing point, and anyway your hands will freeze long before any wrench is even affected.
Freezing oil will be extremely viscous. Oil does not freeze easily. The freezing point of oil is very low like -30oC.
The boiling point AND the freezing point of water.
The freezing point of propanone is -94,7 oC.
The freezing point of radon is -71,15 0C.
0 Celsius is freezing point of water
Fresh water (for instance) will freeze and turn to ice when the temperature drops below freezing point. The ice will thaw (melt back into water) when the temperature rises above freezing point.
It will freeze slower.. but not by a lot. When there are things such as ions / molecules dissolved in water, that mixture of water / substances will have a lower freezing point. Soap, because it is a nonpolar molecule will not SUBSTANTIALLY reduce the freezing point, but it WILL reduce the freezing point by a tiny bit. Because of this reduction in freezing pt, it will take slightly longer for it to freeze So yeah, soapy water will not necessarily freeze faster than tap water.