One commercial application of supercooling is in
refrigeration. Freezers can cool drinks to a supercooled level so that when they are opened, they form a
slush. Another example is a product that can supercool the beverage in a conventional freezer.
The Coca-Cola Company briefly marketed special
vending machines containing
Sprite in the UK, and Coke in Singapore, which stored the bottles in a supercooled state so that their content would turn to
slush upon opening. Supercooling was successfully applied to organ preservation at Massachusetts General Hospital/
Harvard Medical School.
Livers that were later transplanted into recipient animals were preserved by supercooling for up to 4 days, quadrupling the limits of what could be achieved by conventional liver preservation methods. The livers were supercooled to a temperature of in a specialized solution that protected against freezing and injury from the cold temperature. Another potential application is drug delivery. In 2015, researchers crystallized membranes at a specific time. Liquid-encapsulated drugs could be delivered to the site and, with a slight environmental change, the liquid rapidly changes into a crystalline form that releases the drug. In 2016, a team at
Iowa State University proposed a method for "soldering without heat" by using encapsulated droplets of supercooled liquid metal to repair heat sensitive electronic devices. In 2019, the same team demonstrated the use of undercooled metal to print solid metallic interconnects on surfaces ranging from polar (paper and Jello) to superhydrophobic (rose petals), with all the surfaces being lower modulus than the metal. Eftekhari et al. proposed an empirical theory explaining that supercooling of ionic
liquid crystals can build ordered channels for diffusion for energy storage applications. In this case, the electrolyte has a rigid structure comparable to a solid electrolyte, but the diffusion coefficient can be as large as in liquid electrolytes. Supercooling increases the medium viscosity, but keeps the directional channels open for diffusion. In 2017, a lab at the
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa demonstrated that a combination of pulsed electric fields and oscillating magnetic fields can prevent the sudden nucleation of ice crystals. Chicken meat was cooled to −6.5 °C (20.3 °F) in the presence of these fields, and it was subsequently shown that the unfrozen meat retained its quality without significant freezer burn. Following experiments were conducted with fish and beef, where similar preservation effects were observed. ==See also==