Why Did the Beer Freeze at My Favorite Bar?

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In summary, the conversation revolved around a person's encounter with a frozen Corona with lime at their favorite bar and their confusion as to why it happened. Various theories were proposed, including the introduction of the lime causing a reaction that resulted in freezing, the effects of coffee on the viscosity of water, and the possibility of endothermic reactions taking place. The conversation also touched on the concept of 'cold-filtered' beer and the use of 'freezing solutions' in the past.
  • #1
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OK, so I'm at my favorite watering hole last weekend, and someone orders a Corona with lime. The bartender puts the lime in, and the beer starts to freeze. Everyone in the place looks at me and asks me why, and I don't know. "Don't you know anything useful?" they demand, but I can only stammer something about how thermo isn't my specialty.

So, anyone have any ideas? Or do I have to find a new place to hang out?
 
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  • #2
So, anyone have any ideas? Or do I have to find a new place to hang out?
The only idea I would have is to make sure any new hangout serves cold Coronas.

While waiting for a chemist I'd like to throw in a couple more to see if anyone has ever encounter that;

1) Ice melts faster in plain old water than in sugar water (well, a coke that is).
2) Coffee seems less viscous than water and sloshes about readily.
 
  • #3
First guess would have to be that the lime or parts of it acted as a seed crytal for the ice to form.
 
  • #4
Tom,

Back in the old days before current refrigeration methods, people would develop what might be termed "freezing solutions" - basically if you mixed a certain proportion of chemicals together, upon dissolving and reacting, they'd cause the solution to cool. Usually it involved some acidic compound, a basic compound, and a neutral compound (typically a salt) as memory serves. Am guessing that the introduction of the lime (and its associated citric acid and such) started such a reaction and caused freezing. The entire beer didn't freeze (right?) and it was just around where the lime (or its sqeezed juice) was introduced to the Corona. So yes, it was a matter of thermodynamics after all, heh. As for specific compounds reacting, am not totally sure. Might make an interesting experiment, though. Anyone willing to splurge for a case of Corona and some limes for me to analyze? :)

BoulderHead,

When you dissolve sugar in water (or other reasonably soluble compounds in a liquid), you lower the liquid's freezing point (blame colligative properties) by a certain amount. As such, if you were to toss ice cubes into the liquid, the ice cubes are that much further above the freezing point than they otherwise would be with plain water. Of course, with Coke (or other carbonated soft drinks), they tend to be slightly corrosive to begin with (just ask your dentist), so that probably accelerates things as well. As for coffee being less viscous, speaking as a long time coffee drinker, I've never noticed coffee being less viscous. I know (at least in my experience) instant coffees tend to be basically just be hot water with some grains dissolved in them, but well brewed coffee normally has some body and bite to it. Once again, I'd be willing to conduct such a study (although you'd probably have to fund the coffee habit of my entire lab - where we've named our workstations after coffee types).
 
  • #5
MikeH - so would that mean there's an endothermic reation taking place when the lime juice meets the chilled beer?

My initial reply was based on my understanding of what I've heard referred to as 'cold-filtered' or 'ice-filtered' beer. Chilling the beer causes ice to form with crystal growth starting on sediments or precipitates in the brew. Skimming the ice from the batch removes this junk and also raises the alcohol content.

BoulderHead - I've never noticed coffee to be less viscous unless transported in a styrofoam cup for a long commute to work. The proximity of wool clothing also seems to enhance the effect.
 
  • #6
mcleodnine, a big yep to the endothermic reaction part. I should probably reiterate that depending on what combination of chemicals you're working with, some of the effect will be due to the dissolving process and not necessarily any reaction which may take place. I should note that the old fashioned freezing solutions were fashioned so that you'd have a container of water in a larger container, and in the space between the water container and the vessel you'd whip up your freezing solution, sucking energy out of the water and causing it to freeze. That way you wouldn't have who knows what chemicals in your fresh new ice.

Am not sure on how beer is processed after it's been filtered, although it's conceivable there might some effect due to nucleation, especially if the lime is cold enough.
 
  • #7
Mcleodnine,
The proximity of wool clothing also seems to enhance the effect.
Yes, the ‘solution’ to my question might be found in the properties of attraction where the nicer the clothes being worn and the more important the event you’re going to, the more likely it is to be spilled (demon possessed coffee perhaps?).
What I thought I was observing on occasion was that I could carry a cup of water without much problem at all but fill the cup with an equal amount of coffee and the slightest movement seemed to cause the coffee to slosh further up the side of the cup. Eventually I concluded that the coffee might be lowering the viscosity of the water or some such thing as that.

Mike H,
Now I’m confused. When you say that the properties of the Coke might accelerate things are you saying that the ice would melt quicker in the Coke? ‘Cause what I’ve noticed would be the opposite. Do I understand correctly that by lowering the freezing point of the water (adding sugar) the transfer of energy between the solution and the ice-cube is slowed down in some way, causing the ice to take longer to melt?
As for coffee being less viscous, speaking as a long time coffee drinker, I've never noticed coffee being less viscous.
I think walking with a cup of coffee in one hand and a cup of water in the other, then switching which hand you are doing the holding in (to minimize bias), might be a quick way to determine if I have actually stumbled onto something or just crazy….
Once again, I'd be willing to conduct such a study (although you'd probably have to fund the coffee habit of my entire lab - where we've named our workstations after coffee types).
That sounds expensive, how about if I send you guys a box of donuts instead.
 
  • #8
from Boulderhead...
2) Coffee seems less viscous than water and sloshes about readily.

Hot liquids are less viscous then cold liquids (as an example, heating oil to make it flow), but I don't think there would be much difference between the viscousity of hot water and equally hot coffee.

Originally posted by Tom...
The bartender puts the lime in, and the beer starts to freeze.

Just throwing out a possibility here, if the beer was stored at a subfreezing point for water, but above the freezing point of beer, which I would think would be a little lower due to the small alcohol content, could the lime juice have separated the water from the alcohol the way lemon juice separates grease and water, allowing the lower temperature to freeze the water? Sound possible?
 
  • #9
Originally posted by Artman
Hot liquids are less viscous then cold liquids (as an example, heating oil to make it flow), but I don't think there would be much difference between the viscousity of hot water and equally hot coffee.
*slaps forehead*
Yes, it might have only been that all along, thanks.
 
  • #10
Originally posted by BoulderHead
*slaps forehead*
Yes, it might have only been that all along, thanks.

Then again, it may just be the attraction to clothing, which does seem to increase directly with the quality of the garment.

I have noticed two other relationships: The attraction to clothing increases inversely proportional with the darkness of the coffee to the lightness of the fabric, and the probability of a staining spill is greater increased when the pants are part of a suit.
 
  • #11
Drat the luck, I was hoping Demons would have been involved in this. I could have constructed a magic circle of half-filled coffee cups resting upon a priceless Persian rug and challenged the powers of Darkness….
Instead I’ll just have to be more careful next time.
 
  • #12
Originally posted by Artman
Just throwing out a possibility here, if the beer was stored at a subfreezing point for water, but above the freezing point of beer, which I would think would be a little lower due to the small alcohol content, could the lime juice have separated the water from the alcohol the way lemon juice separates grease and water, allowing the lower temperature to freeze the water? Sound possible?

OK, I'm taking this as my first lead. I'm going back there tonight and asking the bartender to put a small cup of water in the cooler. If it freezes, then I'll start looking up colligative properties in my chem book.
 
  • #13
Originally posted by BoulderHead
Drat the luck, I was hoping Demons would have been involved in this. I could have constructed a magic circle of half-filled coffee cups resting upon a priceless Persian rug and challenged the powers of Darkness….
Instead I’ll just have to be more careful next time.
Or maybe you are in a state of heightened awareness when the coffee is around? Perhaps it causes locallised time dilation of a sort...
 
  • #14
Originally posted by BoulderHead
2) Coffee seems less viscous than water and sloshes about readily.

Are you carrying the coffee in the same type of cup, it might be that there is less surface tension with the coffee and whatever kind of cup it is being held by (here at my campus the coffee cups seem really slick on the inside) then there is with the water and whatever kind of cup it is in (assuming a standard glass cup). But if you have them in the exact same cup then my only guess is the difference in heat.
 
  • #15
BoulderHead,

Managed to think it over again, and there are probably a couple of effects going on in solution. Soft drinks are usually slightly acidic, and therefore a bit more reactive than pure water, which alone might accelerate things. However, I think probably the drive towards equilibrium probably outweighs it - you have a mixture of sugar and water (and other things) in the Coke, and just (essentially) pure water in the form of ice.
 
  • #16
I think sherbert causes the same effect in water, or is it lemonade. people used to put it in their drink to keep cool in the days before refridgeraters, and hence ice at the time.

Just some kind of endothermic reaction.

But maybe cryatals are involved.

Do you want to know the scary part.

You friend, after seeing this bizarre reaction, DRANK the liquid. Go figure.
 
  • #17
Originally posted by Artman
Just throwing out a possibility here, if the beer was stored at a subfreezing point for water, but above the freezing point of beer, which I would think would be a little lower due to the small alcohol content, could the lime juice have separated the water from the alcohol the way lemon juice separates grease and water, allowing the lower temperature to freeze the water? Sound possible?

OK, I tested this by having the bartender put a cup of water in the same cooler as the Coronas, and it did not freeze even after a few hours.

Originally posted by mcleodnine
First guess would have to be that the lime or parts of it acted as a seed crytal for the ice to form.

OK, this is the next contestant on The Theory is Right. Does anyone have any references for this? I've never studied crystal growth.
 
  • #18
Ahhh. here's some links tho throw into the stew. These all refer to water so I'm not sure what effect the alcohol will have on things here.

http://www.exploratorium.edu/cooking/candy/activity-drops.html

Also - this quote from http://www.gi.alaska.edu/ScienceForum/ASF7/748.html
it is more correct to say that 0 degrees C is the melting point of ice, rather than to say it is the freezing point of water.
 
  • #19
Now I just read this thread just now, and I ain't a chemist, but what the hell, here's some wild-assed speculation.
The carbonation in the beer is a little equilibrium, with carbon dioxide gas and liquid water on one side, and hydrogen ions and bicarbonate ions on the other. Once the bottle is opened, the equilibrium begins to shift, releasing CO2 and forming liquid water. This will decrease the concentration of dissolved ions, the molality, and consequently raise the freezing point ( if indeed f. p. is the correct term).
Addition of the lime juice, which contains citric acid (a triprotic acid) and other acids, will cause the equlibrium to shift more rapidly to the CO2 side, resulting in a more rapid decrease in molality, with the resulting increase in the freezing temperature.
I initially assumed that the lime juice would be warmer than the beer, and would release a quantity of heat into the beer, negating the effects of the decrease in molality. But maybe the lime was very cold. Maybe try puttung the lime in the freezer and then squeezing it in. I got to stop now because my wife's hollering for me to help her hang a damn picture. I'll try a little math on this tomorrow.

If we had studied useful stuff like this in chemistry class, I might have shown up more often.

Amos Behavin
 
  • #20
Originally posted by amos behavin
Now I just read this thread just now, and I ain't a chemist, but what the hell, here's some wild-assed speculation.
The carbonation in the beer is a little equilibrium, with carbon dioxide gas and liquid water on one side, and hydrogen ions and bicarbonate ions on the other. Once the bottle is opened, the equilibrium begins to shift, releasing CO2 and forming liquid water. This will decrease the concentration of dissolved ions, the molality, and consequently raise the freezing point ( if indeed f. p. is the correct term).
Addition of the lime juice, which contains citric acid (a triprotic acid) and other acids, will cause the equlibrium to shift more rapidly to the CO2 side, resulting in a more rapid decrease in molality, with the resulting increase in the freezing temperature.
I initially assumed that the lime juice would be warmer than the beer, and would release a quantity of heat into the beer, negating the effects of the decrease in molality. But maybe the lime was very cold. Maybe try puttung the lime in the freezer and then squeezing it in. I got to stop now because my wife's hollering for me to help her hang a damn picture. I'll try a little math on this tomorrow.

If we had studied useful stuff like this in chemistry class, I might have shown up more often.

Amos Behavin
[shudder]ughh, chemical equilibriums[/shudder] nice post though, that's pretty good for not being a chemist.
 
  • #21
It ain't the molality change

"The tragedy of science. The slaying of a beautiful hypothesis by an ugly fact."
T. H. Huxley

Well, I tried the increased freezing temperature due to decreased molality idea, but it didn't result in much of a change at all, a few thousandths of a degree is all.
I did find some useful info about beer though. Density is about 1.05g/ml. One guy set a beer outside and claimed that it froze at about -6.66 degrees centigrade. I used that to calculate the molality using the freezing point depression constant of water (1.86).
I'm glad I found that as I was having a hell of a time trying to figure out and add together all of the moles of dissolved particles in the beer, what with the ethanol (4.0-5.0 by volume is what I found) and the pH (about 4.50), and who knows what the hell else is in there.
But I still think that the previously mentioned equilibrium is involved. Here's another SWAG at this.
As the bubbles of CO2 appear in the solution when the equilibrium shifts, at that instant they occupy negligible volume. As they expand they absorb heat. Of course, I think there must be some pressure change when you open the beer in the first place so that may confound this. That's a manifestation of Charles' Law I think. I'm not too sure about that as I really didn't go to Chemistry class much when we were studying gases as that was during deer season. Right there at the surface of the beer, where the acids in the lime are making that equilibrium shift at some presumably rapid rate and the CO2 bubbles are expanding considerably, a lot of heat is getting sucked out of the beer solution, maybe enough to cause a small amount of it to form ice.
I appreciate any comments. If I have something backwards in there, please set me straight.

Amos Behavin
 
  • #22
I am not a chem gooru, I am also a simple person, so here is my answer. Tom that is a great watering hole, cause obviously the beer is damn cold. The beer is under pressure which changes the boiling point of the liquid to be lowered and alows the beer to be super cooled below its normal freazing point compared to atmosheric, when the beer was opened there was a sudden change in pressure causing the beer to tend toward freezing but considering the smooth surfaces in the bottle it did not have particlulate in order to start the process rolling. as you dropped the lime in it caused this process to take place and alowed for the beer to boil if you will, this boiling caused the water in the beer to start freezing as the heat contained into the beer escaped to atmoshere and since the freezing point changed to a different temp it froze. that's my answer anyway.
 
  • #23
Another think you might try, drop something else in the beer to take away the ph or chemical side of the theory. I suppose the lime may have made the beer change its chemical composition enough to cause its boiling point to change at atmosheric pressure, such as different refridgerants boil at different pressures. but it is mostly water in there so I doubt the change is to significant. You could measure the temp of it and it should be lower than 32 degrees in order to freeze that rapidly after being opened.
 

FAQ: Why Did the Beer Freeze at My Favorite Bar?

Why did the beer freeze at my favorite bar?

There are a few possible reasons why your beer may have frozen at your favorite bar. One reason could be that the temperature in the bar was extremely low, causing the beer to freeze. Another possibility is that the beer was left in the freezer or outside in freezing temperatures before being served. Additionally, if the bar has a draft system, the lines or taps could be frozen, causing the beer to freeze as it is poured.

Can beer actually freeze?

Yes, beer can freeze. The freezing point for beer is around 28 degrees Fahrenheit (-2 degrees Celsius). However, the exact freezing point can vary depending on the alcohol content and other factors such as the type of beer and the temperature at which it is stored.

Is it safe to consume frozen beer?

While it is not recommended to consume frozen beer, it is generally safe to drink if it has not been exposed to very low temperatures for an extended period of time. If the beer has been frozen and thawed multiple times, it may have lost its quality and could potentially make you sick. It is best to avoid drinking frozen beer if possible.

How can I prevent my beer from freezing?

To prevent your beer from freezing, make sure it is stored at a temperature above 28 degrees Fahrenheit. Keep it away from any sources of extreme cold, such as a freezer or outside in freezing temperatures. If you are at a bar, you can also ask the bartender to serve your beer in a glass rather than straight from the tap to prevent it from freezing in the lines or taps.

Can I still enjoy a frozen beer?

While it may not be ideal, you can still enjoy a frozen beer if it has not been exposed to very low temperatures for an extended period of time. Just be aware that the taste and quality may be affected. You can also try letting the beer thaw and then drink it, although this may also affect the taste. Ultimately, it is best to avoid drinking frozen beer if possible.

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