It turns to a solid.
Every liquid, with the single exception of liquid helium, will eventually freeze if it gets cold enough. Helium, however, does not freeze.
Well, if it's a hot temperature, liquid can evaporate. If cold, liquid may freeze.
In that case, the liquid will FREEZE.
Water freezes at 32 degrees Fahrenheit, turning from a liquid to a solid state.
I suppose you will get 2-phase liquid: antifreeze at the bottom and gasoline at the top.
The particles move closer together and are practically so close they cannot move.
For a short time nothing; later the skin is irritated and then freeze the hand.
The molecular movement begins to slow down. Intermolecular interactions increase. When the liquid has cooled sufficiently, it will begin to freeze and form a solid.
I think that the liquid detergent will freeze the fastest because it has water in it.
Can them in own liquid and freeze away
When heat energy is taken from a liquid, the temperature of the liquid decreases, causing the molecules to slow down and come closer together. If enough heat is removed, the liquid can eventually freeze and become a solid.
As a general rule, liquids don't freeze things. But the gas, Liquid Nitrogen, can freeze things.