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Evening TMMYes, hot water in a freezer freezes fast than cold water. The reason is that the surface of the freezer usually has a layer of ice on it. Ice is an excellent insulator, and therefore limits the heat transfer to the freezing surface. Putting hot water in your pan (or ice-cube tray) has the effect of melting the ice-layer on the surface, providing for better heat transfer to the surface.There is also the fact that there is increased evaporation from the warm water, which reduces the mass of water that must be cooled
In advance of someone actually posting a comment here's a link to when it was previously discussed......ages ago !!http://www.thenakedscientists.com/forum/index.php?topic=1855.msg14853;topicseen#msg14853you may need to scroll the page up when you click it.
Quote from: neilep on 13/04/2007 21:19:51In advance of someone actually posting a comment here's a link to when it was previously discussed......ages ago !!http://www.thenakedscientists.com/forum/index.php?topic=1855.msg14853;topicseen#msg14853you may need to scroll the page up when you click it.Err, (quickly thinks of excuse), between those dates I was kidnapped by aliens and did not have access to the internet. [^] []Cheers Paul that was the effect and some of the info was new to me.TMM
Something that has been known about for ages and I only just find out. doh!Difficult to believe but apparently, warm water freezes quicker than cold water.What do you think?TMM
JimBob,is this what you are after?The Mpemba Effect is a special phenomenon where hot water freezes faster than cold water. The discovery of this effect was made by a high school student named Mpemba in Tanzania, Africa in 1969.
The discovery of this effect was made by a high school student named Mpemba in Tanzania, Africa in 1969.