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by foobarian
1369 days ago
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This was a bit hard to spot in the writeup, as I have no clue about how ice cream making and machines work. Otherwise we could just use ice, which will be as cold as the refrigerator can get it. (I doubt the endothermic reaction of dissolving the salt contributes very much to the cooling). Now that I think about it, if I were doing this I would use antifreeze for the coolant instead of wasting salt. Bonus, I can store the antifreeze when done, but the salt water is wasted unless I'm going to use it to make some kind of soup or similar. |
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Surface contact is one reason you want an ice/water slurry instead of just ice, but the real reason is that ice melting consume a lot more energy than just ice being warmed up to it's melting point.
The ice will quickly come up to it's melting (equilibrium!) point, without cooling the ice cream mixture very much. Remember, we're trying to freeze the ice cream (not just cool it down), which is proportionally just as thermodynamically expensive as melting ice. Bringing the ice up to it's melting point alone won't suck enough heat out of the ice cream mixture to freeze it.