superkülmumine
Superkülmumine is a physical phenomenon in which a substance is cooled below its normal freezing point without forming a solid phase. In practice, it describes a metastable state in which liquids remain liquid despite temperatures at which crystallization would be thermodynamically favored. The degree of superkülmumine is often expressed as the amount of supercooling: the difference between the actual temperature and the equilibrium freezing point.
The effect occurs most readily in very pure liquids with few nucleation sites. Cooling rate, container surfaces,
Common examples include distilled water cooled in clean conditions, which can remain liquid well below 0 °C,
Limitations and considerations include the presence of impurities, rough container walls, vibrations, or mechanical agitation, all
See also: supercooling, nucleation, metastable phase, cryopreservation.