Water/Freezing point

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Revision as of 16:12, 15 February 2010 by imported>David Yamakuchi (I had a hard time getting refs to transclude thru templates. Perhaps Milton's simple table transclusion will work better...)
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Not measurable [1] [2]


Note: The freezing point of "pure" water is not measurable, whereas the melting point is. This is because pure water does not freeze without help of a solid crystallization kernel.[3] Very cold (metastable) pure liquid water can be obtained by "supercooling" pure water. Pure liquid water has been reported to be possible down to various extremely low temperatures: (-38°C to -45°C[4]) and (231°K=-43.9°C[5]).

The standard unit of thermodynamic temperature, currently defined in the SI system as °K (degrees Kelvin), selects as the fundamental fixed point the triple point of water. One degree Kelvin, and therefore 1°C (Celsius), is specified by multiple standards bodies[6][7] as the fraction 1/273.16 of waters triple point. Formerly (until 1954[8]) the definition developed by Anders Celsius had fixed the 0°C point at the "freezing point" of water.[9] It is now generally accepted that while the phase transition from solid to liquid water occurs at a predictable temperature (namely 0°C), the transition from liquid to solid water does not. This is because the actual "Freezing" is dependent upon the previously mentioned nucleation as well as the temperature.