Cooling bath

A typical experimental setup for an aldol reaction. Both flasks are submerged in a dry ice/acetone cooling bath (−78 °C) the temperature of which is being monitored by a thermocouple (the wire on the left).

A cooling bath, in laboratory chemistry practice, is a liquid mixture which is used to maintain low temperatures, typically between 13 °C and −196 °C. These low temperatures are used to collect liquids after distillation, to remove solvents using a rotary evaporator, or to perform a chemical reaction below room temperature (see: kinetic control).

Cooling baths are generally one of two types: (a) a cold fluid (particularly liquid nitrogen, water, or even air) — but most commonly the term refers to (b) a mixture of 3 components: (1) a cooling agent (such as dry ice or water ice); (2) a liquid 'carrier' (such as liquid water, ethylene glycol, acetone, etc.), which transfers heat between the bath and the vessel; ; and (3) an additive to depress the melting-point of the solid/liquid system.

A familiar example of this is the use of an ice/rock-salt mixture to freeze ice cream. Adding salt lowers the freezing temperature of water, lowering the minimum temperature attainable with only ice.

Mixed solvent cooling baths (% by volume) [1]
% Glycol in EtOH Temp (°C) % H2O in MeOH Temp (°C)
0% -78 0% −97.6
10% -76 14% -128
20% -72 20% N/A
30% -66 30% −72
40% -60 40% −64
50% -52 50% −47
60% -41 60% −36
70% -32 70% −20
80% -28 80% −12.5
90% -21 90% −5.5
100% -17 100% 0

Mixed Solvent Cooling Baths

Mixing solvents creates cooling baths with variable freezing points. Temperatures between approximately −78 °C and −17 °C can be maintained by placing coolant into a mixture of ethylene glycol and ethanol,[1] while mixtures of methanol and water span the −128 °C to 0 °C temperature range.,[2][3] Dry ice sublimes at −78 °C, while liquid nitrogen is used for colder baths.

As water or ethylene glycol freeze out of the mixture the concentration of ethanol/methanol increases. This leads to a new, lower freezing point. With dry ice these baths will never freeze solid, as pure methanol and ethanol both freeze below −78 °C (-98 °C and -114 °C, respectively).

Relative to traditional cooling baths, solvent mixtures are adaptable for a wide temperature range. In addition, the solvents necessary are cheaper and less toxic than those used in traditional baths.[1]

Traditional cooling baths

Traditional cooling bath mixtures [4]
Cooling agent Organic solvent or salt Temp (°C)
Dry ice p-xylene +13
Dry ice Dioxane +12
Dry ice Cyclohexane +6
Dry ice Benzene +5
Dry ice Formamide +2
Ice Salts (see: above) 0 to −40
Liquid N2 Cycloheptane −12
Dry ice Benzyl alcohol −15
Dry ice Tetrachloroethylene −22
Dry ice Carbon tetrachloride −23
Dry ice 1,3-Dichlorobenzene −25
Dry ice o-Xylene −29
Dry ice m-Toluidine −32
Dry ice Acetonitrile −41
Dry ice Pyridine −42
Dry ice m-Xylene −47
Dry ice n-Octane −56
Dry ice Isopropyl ether −60
Dry ice Acetone −78
Liquid N2 Ethyl acetate −84
Liquid N2 n-Butanol −89
Liquid N2 Hexane −94
Liquid N2 Acetone −94
Liquid N2 Toluene −95
Liquid N2 Methanol −98
Liquid N2 Cyclohexene −104
Liquid N2 Ethanol −116
Liquid N2 n-Pentane −131
Liquid N2 Isopentane −160
Liquid N2 (none) −196

Water and ice baths

A bath of ice and water will maintain a temperature 0 °C since the melting point of water is 0 °C. However, adding a salt such as sodium chloride will lower the temperature through the property of melting-point depression. Although the exact temperature can be hard to control, the weight ratio of salt to ice influences the temperature:

Dry ice baths at −78 °C

Since dry ice will sublime at −78 °C, a mixture such as acetone/dry ice will maintain −78 °C. Also, the solution will not freeze because acetone requires a temperature of about −93 °C to begin freezing. Therefore, other liquids with a lower freezing point (pentane: −95 °C) can also be used to maintain the bath at −78 °C.

Dry ice baths above −77 °C

In order to maintain temperatures above −77 °C, a solvent with a freezing point above −77 °C must be used. When dry ice is added to acetonitrile then the bath will begin cooling. Once the temperature reaches −41 °C, the acetonitrile will freeze. Therefore, dry ice must be added slowly to avoid freezing the entire mixture. In these cases, a bath temperature of −55 °C can be achieved by choosing a solvent with a similar freezing point (n-octane freezes at −56 °C).

Liquid nitrogen baths above −196 °C

Liquid nitrogen baths follow the same idea as dry ice baths. A temperature of −115 °C can be maintained by slowly adding liquid nitrogen to the organic solvent (ethanol) until it begins to freeze (ethanol freezes at −116 °C).

Water/ice alternatives

In water and ice-based baths, tap water is commonly used due to ease of access and the higher costs of using ultrapure water. However, tap water and ice derived from tap water can be a contaminant to biological and chemical samples. This has created a host of insulated devices aimed at creating a similar cooling or freezing effect as ice baths without the use of water or ice.[5]

Safety Recommendations

The American Chemical Society notes that the ideal organic solvents to use in a cooling baths have the following characteristics: 1. Nontoxic vapors 2. Low viscosity 3. Nonflammability 4. Low volatility 5. Suitable freezing point. In some cases, a simple substitution can give nearly identical results while lowering risks. For example, using dry ice in 2-propanol rather than acetone yields a nearly identical temperature but avoids the volatility of acetone (see Further Reading).

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Lee, Do W.; Jensen, Craig M. (2000). "Dry-Ice Bath Based on Ethylene Glycol Mixtures". J. Chem. Ed. 77: 629. doi:10.1021/ed077p629.
  2. Methanol/Water mixtures make great cooling baths – Chemtips. Chemtips.wordpress.com. Retrieved on 2015-02-23
  3. The ridiculously thorough guide to making a MeOH/Water bath - Chemtips. Chemtips.wordpress.com. Retrieved on 2015-02-23.
  4. Cooling baths – ChemWiki. Chemwiki.ucdavis.edu. Retrieved on 2013-06-17.
  5. "Benchtop ice-free cooling and freezing devices". Retrieved August 11, 2012.

Further reading

External links

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