DRY ICE FREEZER


Dry Ice Freezer

    dry ice

  • solidified carbon dioxide; dry ice sublimates at -78.5 C and is used mainly as a refrigerant
  • Solid carbon dioxide
  • The cold dense white mist produced by this in air, used for theatrical effects
  • Dry ice, sometimes referred to as “Cardice” or as “card ice” is the solid form of carbon dioxide.
  • Carbon dioxide frozen in the solid state, used especially as a cooling agent and for the production of fog-like special effects. It sublimes at -78.5°C (-109.3°F) at normal atmospheric pressure

    freezer

  • A refrigerated compartment, cabinet, or room for preserving food at very low temperatures
  • A device for making frozen desserts such as ice cream or sherbet
  • Pokemon has 493 (as of Pokemon Diamond and Pearl) distinctive fictional species classified as the titular Pokemon.
  • deep-freeze: electric refrigerator (trade name Deepfreeze) in which food is frozen and stored for long periods of time
  • A refrigerator is a cooling apparatus. The common household appliance (often called a “fridge” for short) comprises a thermally insulated compartment and a heat pump—chemical or mechanical means—to transfer heat from it to the external environment (i.e.

dry ice freezer

dry ice freezer – LogTag® TRIL-8

LogTag® TRIL-8 Dry-Ice probe-less low temperature Recorder
LogTag® TRIL-8 Dry-Ice probe-less low temperature Recorder
The LogTag Dry Ice “Probe-less” Temperature Recorder operates, measures and stores up to 8000 temperature readings in temperature environments ranging from -80°C to +40°C (-112°F to +104°F). Intended for use in transit monitoring of articles stored in packaging incorporating dry ice cooling agents. Using the LogTag Interface and LogTag’s freely available companion software LogTag Analyzer, the LogTag Dry Ice Temperature Recorder is easily configured for recording conditions including delayed start, sampling interval, number of readings and configuration of conditions to activate the ALERT indicator. The Red Alert indicator provides an immediate indication, without access to a PC, if any readings are outside the limits specified at the time the unit was configured. Green OK indicator provides immediate visual confirmation, without access to a PC, that the unit is operating.

playing with dry ice

playing with dry ice
And the steaks come w/ a big hunk of dry ice that you just Have to play with. It’s obligatory. And I learned it’s rather difficult to take pictures of water vapor, no matter how tangible it looks to a human eye.

Godons Dry Gin

Godons Dry Gin
Two different layers of ice. Clearly it was laying on its face, with the thicker ice crystals forming (and falling) on its back.