The phenomenon of freezing-point depression has many practical uses. The radiator fluid in an automobile is a mixture of water and
ethylene glycol. The freezing-point depression prevents radiators from freezing in winter.
Road salting takes advantage of this effect to lower the freezing point of the ice it is placed on. Lowering the freezing point allows the street ice to melt at lower temperatures, preventing the accumulation of dangerous, slippery ice. Commonly used
sodium chloride can depress the freezing point of water to about . If the road surface temperature is lower, NaCl becomes ineffective and other salts are used, such as
calcium chloride,
magnesium chloride or a mixture of many. These salts are somewhat aggressive to metals, especially iron, so in airports safer media such as
sodium formate,
potassium formate,
sodium acetate, and
potassium acetate are used instead. Freezing-point depression is used by some organisms that live in extreme cold. Such creatures have
evolved means through which they can produce a high concentration of various compounds such as
sorbitol and
glycerol. This elevated concentration of solute decreases the freezing point of the water inside them, preventing the organism from freezing solid even as the water around them freezes, or as the air around them becomes very cold. Examples of organisms that produce antifreeze compounds include some species of
arctic-living
fish such as the
rainbow smelt, which produces glycerol and other molecules to survive in frozen-over estuaries during the winter months. In other animals, such as the
spring peeper frog (
Pseudacris crucifer), the molality is increased temporarily as a reaction to cold temperatures. In the case of the peeper frog, freezing temperatures trigger a large-scale breakdown of
glycogen in the frog's liver and subsequent release of massive amounts of
glucose into the blood. With the formula below, freezing-point depression can be used to measure the degree of
dissociation or the
molar mass of the solute. This kind of measurement is called
cryoscopy (
Greek cryo = cold,
scopos = observe; "observe the cold") and relies on exact measurement of the freezing point. The degree of dissociation is measured by determining the
van 't Hoff factor i by first determining
mB and then comparing it to
msolute. In this case, the molar mass of the solute must be known. The molar mass of a solute is determined by comparing
mB with the amount of solute dissolved. In this case,
i must be known, and the procedure is primarily useful for organic compounds using a nonpolar solvent. Cryoscopy is no longer as common a measurement method as it once was, but it was included in textbooks at the turn of the 20th century. As an example, it was still taught as a useful analytic procedure in Cohen's
Practical Organic Chemistry of 1910, in which the
molar mass of
naphthalene is determined using a
Beckmann freezing apparatus.
Laboratory uses Freezing-point depression can also be used as a purity analysis tool when analyzed by
differential scanning calorimetry. The results obtained are in mol%, but the method has its place, where other methods of analysis fail. In the laboratory,
lauric acid may be used to investigate the
molar mass of an unknown substance via the freezing-point depression. The choice of lauric acid is convenient because the melting point of the pure compound is relatively high (43.8 °C). Its
cryoscopic constant is 3.9 °C·kg/mol. By melting lauric acid with the unknown substance, allowing it to cool, and recording the temperature at which the mixture freezes, the molar mass of the unknown compound may be determined. This is also the same principle acting in the melting-point depression observed when the melting point of an impure solid mixture is measured with a
melting-point apparatus since melting and freezing points both refer to the liquid-solid
phase transition (albeit in different directions). In principle, the boiling-point elevation and the freezing-point depression could be used interchangeably for this purpose. However, the
cryoscopic constant is larger than the
ebullioscopic constant, and the freezing point is often easier to measure with precision, which means measurements using the freezing-point depression are more precise. FPD measurements are also used in the dairy industry to ensure that milk has not had extra water added. Milk with a FPD of over 0.509 °C is considered to be unadulterated. ==Formula==