superkülmutus
Superkülmutus, or supercooling, is a physical phenomenon in which a liquid is cooled below its normal freezing point without forming a solid phase. The state is metastable; it persists only because nucleation of the solid phase has not yet occurred. Superkülmutus depends on high purity, the absence of nucleation sites, and controlled cooling. In practical terms, many liquids can be cooled tens of degrees below their freezing point before crystallization begins; disturbance, impurities, or contact with a seed crystal typically triggers rapid solidification.
Two main pathways are recognized: homogeneous nucleation, where crystal formation emerges spontaneously in the liquid, and
Water is a well-known example; in clean, undisturbed conditions, microdroplets can remain liquid below 0°C, with
Etymology: in Finnish scientific usage, külmutus means freezing, and superkülmutus denotes this metastable cooling phenomenon. See