EVieira
Member
+105|6920|Lutenblaag, Molvania
Lets say you have a glass of coke with plenty of ice. Its filled to the top, just barely not spilling over the top. Once the ice melts, will the coke spill over the top, stay in the same place, or go down?
"All truths are easy to understand once they are discovered;  the point is to discover them."
Galileo Galilei  (1564-1642)
CoconutBlitz
I've had the diarrheas since Easters
+145|7031|California U.S.A
It will go down, the ice expands taking up more volmue as it melts less mass will be in the glass
Towelly
It's A State Of Mind
+399|7032|Your attic

Seal 3 wrote:

It will go down, the ice expands taking up more volmue as it melts less mass will be in the glass
Why do things contract when they freeze then?

Unless my understanding of the physics/chemistry involved is way off the coke should spill out from the glass.
Mong0ose
Will it blend?
+24|6928|UK
Water expands when it freezes, therefore the level in the glass will go down as it melts
stryyker
bad touch
+1,682|7161|California

Wouldnt overflow because I would have drunk half of it.
Mong0ose
Will it blend?
+24|6928|UK

Seal 3 wrote:

It will go down, the ice expands taking up more volmue as it melts less mass will be in the glass
That is totally wrong, the same mass will be in the glass, just at a smaller volume, due to the density change of the melting ice

1kg of ice would still produce 1kg of water
SilentscoutIX
BF2s US Server Admin
+91|6829|Vancouver, BC, Canada

Towelly wrote:

Seal 3 wrote:

It will go down, the ice expands taking up more volmue as it melts less mass will be in the glass
Why do things contract when they freeze then?

Unless my understanding of the physics/chemistry involved is way off the coke should spill out from the glass.
Water is the only substance that I know of that expands when it's frozen. I believe it's unique in that fact.
Yes the level of liquid in the glass would go down.
lt603668
Member
+6|6803|northern cali

EVieira wrote:

Lets say you have a glass of coke with plenty of ice. Its filled to the top, just barely not spilling over the top. Once the ice melts, will the coke spill over the top, stay in the same place, or go down?
Thats some shit right there.
DonFck
Hibernator
+3,227|7073|Finland

- Water expands approximately 9% when solified (frozen)source
- A body of ice floats with approximately 10% above the water surface. source

So.. you haven't given us sufficient information.

What % of the ice is floating freely -> 10% above the surface?
How much ice is there altogether in the glass? (under the surface)
I need around tree fiddy.
Coolbeano
Level 13.5 BF2S Ninja Penguin Sensei
+378|7205

DonFck wrote:

- Water expands approximately 9% when solified (frozen)source
- A body of ice floats with approximately 10% above the water surface. source

So.. you haven't given us sufficient information.

What % of the ice is floating freely -> 10% above the surface?
How much ice is there altogether in the glass? (under the surface)
Damnit I was going to say that.


SilentscoutIX wrote:

Water is the only substance that I know of that expands when it's frozen. I believe it's unique in that fact.
Any compound with a bent tetrahedral bond shape will expand when frozen. Anything non-tesselatable, really.
EVieira
Member
+105|6920|Lutenblaag, Molvania

DonFck wrote:

- Water expands approximately 9% when solified (frozen)source
- A body of ice floats with approximately 10% above the water surface. source

So.. you haven't given us sufficient information.

What % of the ice is floating freely -> 10% above the surface?
How much ice is there altogether in the glass? (under the surface)
Since this is an American forum, I'll consider this an American glass of coke. Since you yankees drink coke with an absurd amount of ice, let's assume there's plenty of ice below the surface also. And of course there is ice floating at the surface.

Remember though that the glass is nearly spilling, if a drop o coke falls in the glass it will spill over.
"All truths are easy to understand once they are discovered;  the point is to discover them."
Galileo Galilei  (1564-1642)
the_B3
BF2s EU 2142 Server Adore
+69|7083|The Netherlands
Ok, water has a higher density then ice (that's why ice floats). So the mass doesn't change when melting but the volume will. The volume will go down.
BUT:
The glass is filled to the top. When ice floates, it has aprox. 10% of it's mass above the water (coke) level.
In theory the level of a frozen glass of water will go down when melting. But in this case I don't know excactly because of the ~10% ice floating above the top level.

EDIT (because you guys where quicker with posting);
If the glass is filled up with ice so there will be more ice then coke, the level will drop when melting.
And it will rise again if the temp. reaches >4 degr.C because water has his highest density between 0 degrC and 4 degrC

Last edited by eS^theB3brr (2006-12-29 02:59:43)

Jussimies
Finnish commander whore
+76|7026|Finland
I love these questions, I think I am putting some ice to icer now, well not really.

It will stay at the same level.
RavyGravy
Son.
+617|6847|NSW, Australia

stryyker wrote:

Wouldnt overflow because I would have drunk half of it.
qft...actually i would have drank it all
Towelly
It's A State Of Mind
+399|7032|Your attic

Coolbeano wrote:

SilentscoutIX wrote:

Water is the only substance that I know of that expands when it's frozen. I believe it's unique in that fact.
Any compound with a bent tetrahedral bond shape will expand when frozen. Anything non-tesselatable, really.
Voosh

That was the sound of your post flying straight over my head.
EVieira
Member
+105|6920|Lutenblaag, Molvania
The portion of ice floating above the surface doesn't contribute to the level of coke? Lets put it another way, if I take the superstructure of a battleship (the tall part, where they have the bridge) off, wouldn't this make the ship lighter and therefore make it rise?
"All truths are easy to understand once they are discovered;  the point is to discover them."
Galileo Galilei  (1564-1642)
DonFck
Hibernator
+3,227|7073|Finland

EVieira wrote:

DonFck wrote:

- Water expands approximately 9% when solified (frozen)source
- A body of ice floats with approximately 10% above the water surface. source

So.. you haven't given us sufficient information.

What % of the ice is floating freely -> 10% above the surface?
How much ice is there altogether in the glass? (under the surface)
Since this is an American forum, I'll consider this an American glass of coke. Since you yankees drink coke with an absurd amount of ice, let's assume there's plenty of ice below the surface also. And of course there is ice floating at the surface.

Remember though that the glass is nearly spilling, if a drop o coke falls in the glass it will spill over.
Hmm.. I like to see this place as an international forum..

Let's say the glass is filled with ice in a way that it barely floats from the bottom of the glass. And that all icecubes are connected together. We could in that case make the assumtion that 10% of the ice is floating above the surface, which also is the edge of the glass. Now, lets go back to the facts we know (also quoted here) about the expanding of water, and calculate.

When the ice melts, it will lose its +9% volume and +10% flotation. And as these are approximate values, we could easily make the assumption that the level of liquid will remain unchanged.

1 unit water, when frozen displaces pretty much its mass when floating in water. Putting aside variables such as mass increase/decrase at temperature changes, we should be able to assume that as the ice melts it will continue to displace it's mass but reduces in volume, until it's completely integrated with the "original liquid". The surface level will remain unchanged.

You will have yourself a flat coke.

Paul Walorski, Part Time Physics Instructor wrote:

The water level remains the same when the ice cube melts.

A floating object displaces an amount of water equal to its own weight. Since water expands when it freezes, one ounce of frozen water has a larger volume than one ounce of liquid water. A completely submerged ice cube weighing one ounce, for example, displaces MORE than one ounce of liquid water. The cube will rise until the volume remaining under the surface displaces only one ounce of water.

If you could remove the ice cube and leave a 'hole' in the water where the cube used to float without disturbing the surrounding water, that hole would take exactly one ounce of liquid water to fill. Let the ice cube melt. Since it is now one ounce of liquid water, putting it back into the 'hole' will exactly fill it and leave the remaining water undisturbed.
Now.. If you were to make a Cuba Libre out of it, the level would fall:

Yasar Safkan, Ph.D. wrote:

However, note that this may not apply to everything. If you had solid alcohol floating in water, when it melts, the level would drop, because water and alcohol mix at the molecular level; i.e. water filling spaces among alcohol molecules.
Source

Last edited by DonFck (2006-12-29 03:28:32)

I need around tree fiddy.
Coolbeano
Level 13.5 BF2S Ninja Penguin Sensei
+378|7205

Towelly wrote:

Coolbeano wrote:

SilentscoutIX wrote:

Water is the only substance that I know of that expands when it's frozen. I believe it's unique in that fact.
Any compound with a bent tetrahedral bond shape will expand when frozen. Anything non-tesselatable, really.
Voosh

That was the sound of your post flying straight over my head.
That was partially the point

But since you so kindly asked...

Water molecules are shaped in a bent figure. You've probably seen it, the two hydrogens on an oxygen, and they're not in a line, they're at an angle. (104.5 degrees, i believe).

It's bent because of two lone pairs of un-bonded electrons on the oxygen's valence shell. But you don't need to know that

Anyway, it expands when frozen because this odd angled shape doesn't fit well in a tight pattern unlike, say, molecules shaped like squares or lines or cubes. In liquid form the molecules move around fast enough that they can get awfully close to each other, so it's more dense.

Think of it as trying to squish together a bunch of giant macaroni, compared to squishing together a bunch of penne pasta.


edit: but back on topic, it depends. how much ice, what the density of the coke is, flat coke or carbonated, etc.

Last edited by Coolbeano (2006-12-29 03:42:22)

Ender2309
has joined the GOP
+470|7012|USA

EVieira wrote:

Lets say you have a glass of coke with plenty of ice. Its filled to the top, just barely not spilling over the top. Once the ice melts, will the coke spill over the top, stay in the same place, or go down?
go down. the hydrogen bonds in Ice cause it to expand as it freezes, and contract as it warms. therefore, the water level will drop, but it will be a negligible amount.
Coolbeano
Level 13.5 BF2S Ninja Penguin Sensei
+378|7205

Ender, you're forgetting that ice also floats because of that, which means that there'll be some water above the surface to begin and the coke displacement less.
MastersMom
YOUR mom goes to college
+61|7097
That's it, I'm going to get a soda!
Darky
Hi..
+71|7003|Here.
These are the sort of questions found in Yr 11 and 12 physics. I hated physics (really have no idea why I took it), therefore, I hate this post.
VicktorVauhn
Member
+319|6834|Southern California
The ice is less dense then the water, as shown by the fact that it floats. This means for the same mass ice takes up more room then water, so when the ice melts it takes up less room.

Water still gets denser as it gets colder, the molecule's of H2O loose energy and move slower and get closer together. But once the water looses enough energy for the H2O molecules to begin to bond together a structure begins to form that makes the water less dense.

Here is water molecules, One oxygen, two hydrogen.
https://www.elmhurst.edu/~chm/vchembook/images/206water.gif
In liquid water each H2O molecule is  free to move around, since there aren't any ridged bonds holding them into position they can move as close to each other as possible

Around 4 degrees Cecilius water starts to form a crystal structure and solidify into ice.
The picture above shows the 2 extra sites on the Oxygen molecule where bonds can form. The dots represent a pair of electrons.
When ice forms each oxygen has 2 hydrogens from other water molecule bond to them.
It forms an orderly structure called a crystal lattice
https://www.aquadyntech.com/structureofice.gif
The structure of the bonds causes gaps and spaces the molecules farther apart then when they where free to fit move freely around each other in  the liquid state.

So water gets less dense as it cools, the expands as it forms an orderly crystal structure, then continues shrinking again as the crystal structure shrinks up with the decrease in temp.
Coolbeano
Level 13.5 BF2S Ninja Penguin Sensei
+378|7205

Thank you for explaining pretty much what I just said earlier
Adams_BJ
Russian warship, go fuck yourself
+2,055|7064|Little Bentcock
If it is below the ice, the beverage would stay the same, if there is some above the liquid, it will rise and spill.

Board footer

Privacy Policy - © 2025 Jeff Minard