|
Bumble Bee Dry Ice is frozen carbon dioxide, a normal part of
our Earth's atmosphere. It is the gas that we exhale during
breathing and the gas that plants use in photosynthesis. It is
also the same gas commonly added to water to make soda water.
Dry Ice is particularly useful for freezing, and keeping things
frozen because of its very cold temperature: -109.3°F or
-78.5°C. Dry Ice is widely used because it is simple to freeze
and easy to handle using insulated gloves. Dry Ice changes
directly from a solid to a gas -sublimation- in normal
atmospheric conditions without going through a wet liquid stage.
Therefore it gets the name "dry ice."
As a general rule, Dry Ice will sublimate at a rate of five to
ten pounds every 24 hours in a typical ice chest. This
sublimation continues from the time of purchase, therefore, pick
up Dry Ice as close to the time needed as possible. Bring an ice
chest or some other insulated container to hold the Dry Ice and
slow the sublimation rate. Dry Ice sublimates faster than
regular ice melts but will extend the life of regular ice.
It is best not to store Dry Ice in your freezer because your
freezer's thermostat will shut off the freezer due to the
extreme cold of the Dry Ice! Of course if the freezer is broken,
Dry Ice will save all your frozen goods.
Commercial
shippers of perishables often use dry ice even for non frozen
goods. Dry ice gives more than twice the cooling energy per
pound of weight and three times the cooling energy per volume
than regular water ice (H2O).
It is often mixed with regular ice to save shipping weight and
extend the cooling energy of water ice. Sometimes dry ice is
made on the spot from liquid
CO2. The resulting dry ice snow is packed
in the top of a shipping container offering extended cooling
without electrical refrigeration equipment and connections.
Click here for videos on handling Dry Ice
Dry Ice Applications:
|