How Is Dry Ice Made?
Anyone old enough to remember "ice boxes", will remember the
daily deliveries of huge blocks of ice that kept their meat and
food cool inside the icebox, a forerunner of the refrigerator.
But those blocks were hugely messy when they melted, and turned
to liquid.
That's one problem you don't have with dry ice. Because it is
just what its name says- dry ice. And when it "melts", it is
actually changing its state from a solid to a gas. Dry ice is
carbon dioxide gas that has been subjected to high pressure.
Just as the nature of water changes according to the sea level,
boiling at lower temperatures, at lower pressures, carbon
dioxide also has a solid-liquid-gas transformation related to
pressure. At normal pressure, CO2 is not quite liquid, and not
quite a gas. But when confined within the high-pressure chamber
of a fire extinguisher, it becomes a liquid.
To make dry ice, liquid carbon dioxide is released from a high
pressure container, after which there is a rapid evaporation of
some of the gas into the air, which results in almost
instantaneous cooling of the rest of the escaping liquid, to
freezing point. The ice/foam like product is then subjected to
compression, to create blocks of ice whose surface temperature
averages around -109F.
The very density, and the slow process of evaporation after
compression, makes dry ice the perfect way to ship perishables
over very long distances. There are no messy puddles of water
because any evaporation turns the dry ice to a gas released into
the air. For this very important reason, dry ice should never be
carried in a closed vehicle, and/or kept in a room without
proper ventilation. When the CO2 content in normal air rises
about its standard 5% level, it becomes toxic.