The name soda normally implies gassy or "fizzy". Soda is fizzy because carbon dioxide, a gas, is dissolved in the water under pressure. When you open the soda the pressure inside the can is released and the gas bubbles out. The carbon dioxide sits happily in the water while under pressure, because it is quite soluble. However, carbon dioxide is not soluble in ice. When you freeze soda the gas comes out of solution, and causes an unusually high pressure in the can. You will often see the can distort, sometimes to the point of becoming almost a perfect sphere. Opening a can of frozen soda is always messy and can be dangerous. If you get a can like this, put it away in a safe place. As it thaws the carbon dioxide will go back into solution, the pressure will return to safe levels and the can will return to almost its original shape. It's OK to drink it.
when in freezer for a long period of time it usually busts open because ice is less dense than water, i.e. occupies more volume than liquid water. Since soda is mostly water, it expands when frozen.
You can freeze a bottle of soda when its open, only if the cap is off when you freeze it. You can also put it in a small, plastic cup and freeze it to make a popcicle.
Because it is water based, the contents will expand and split or crack the container. It can explode and make a mess of your freezer or car interior if that's where you leave it.
Yes. It will cause the aluminum to cool and assume the temperature of the freezer. And it won't take long either, as aluminum is a pretty good conductor of heat. That's about it.
the soda freeze? or if there is no soda inside the bottle the gas inside the soda bottle will "contract"? i guess and the bottle will be crushed
yes, you can freeze unopened soda.
It will get cold.
The water will turn into ice so it will be like one giant ice cube.
you don't state whether the pot is metal or ceramic
If you put a glowstick in the freezer, its light slowly dims before fully going out.
Thermal energy in the water is transferred to the air in the freezer, mainly by convection. From there, it is absorbed by the evaporator coils which line the interior of the freezer; the refrigerant fluid in the coils circulates to the outside, where it is compressed and the heat is dissipated into the room as it passes through the condenser coils on the outside of the freezer.
It freezes.
It should get pushed in slightly as the molecules are moving slower therefore the pressure inside is reduced
same as if it happens with cold coke, it explodes into a fountain of coke!
it charges
I think you need to try this. Put water in the freezer and see what happens.
you get golden coke
It dissolves.
put a pin in it
It goes solid.
Rather, nothing will happen to the empty water bubble but just making the plastic cold. Actually, it isn't the plastic bottle that is affected, it's only the water that is being affected (if there is any).
The acids in the coke eventually degrade the raisins, and you ruin a perfectly good coke.
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