Well, adding Sodium Chloride can do the trick. It depresses the freezing of water therefore it will freeze at a much lower temprature. Actually, salt is used in many occasions to keep things unfrozen-for example, roads in winter...
If you mean for a liquid (such as water), Sugar delays freezing and sometimes alltogether stops it at the normal 32 degrees F or 0 C. This is because you are adding a new substance to the water that combines its properties with the liquid. This makes the water technically thicker and harder to freeze.
Get out of the freezing water.
Freezing water of is an example of physical change.
Salt can be used to depress the freezing point of water. For example, to delay the freezing of water on roads during winter, salt can be applied to the roads before the water on the surface reaches the freezing point. Consequently, the salt will dissolve in the water and force the freezing point down by an amount proportional to the mole fraction of salt present. As a result, the water will not freeze at 0 degrees Celsius but instead will freeze at some lower temperature, keeping ice off the road. This is an example of the colligative properties of matter.
water freezing into ice liquid to solid
How do freezing water help society?
water freezing into ice liquid to solid
Freezing water is an intensive property.
Freezing water is a physical change because the end product is different. Freezing water is considered ice instead of water.
The experimental variable of freezing water would be the temperature at which the water freezes. By changing the temperature, you can observe how it affects the freezing point of water.
You can add antifreeze to water to prevent it from freezing.
It is the freezing point of water and equivalent to 32 degrees fahrenheit it is freezing! In Fahrenheit, it is 32 degrees. It is also the freezing point of water in Celsius.