❄️ Freezing Point Depression – Colligative Property Explained
When you dissolve a solute in a solvent, the resulting solution freezes at a lower temperature than the pure solvent. This phenomenon is called freezing point depression, and it is one of the four colligative properties of solutions — properties that depend on the number of solute particles rather than their chemical identity.
📐 The Formula
Freezing point depression is calculated using a simple, elegant expression:
ΔTf = i × Kf × mWhere:
• ΔTf — Freezing point depression (°C or K)
• i — van't Hoff factor (particles per formula unit)
• Kf — Cryoscopic constant of the solvent (°C·kg/mol)
• m — Molality of the solution (mol/kg solvent)
The new freezing point of the solution is then: Tf(solution) = Tf(pure solvent) − ΔTf
🔬 Why Does Freezing Point Depression Occur?
When a pure solvent freezes, its molecules organize into a highly ordered crystal lattice. Dissolved solute particles interrupt this ordering process — they physically occupy positions that solvent molecules would otherwise fill, reducing the rate of crystal formation. As a result, the solution must be cooled to a lower temperature before enough solvent molecules can arrange themselves into a solid lattice. The more particles dissolved (higher molality and higher van't Hoff factor), the greater the disruption and the larger the depression.
⚗️ Cryoscopic Constants (Kf) for Common Solvents
Each solvent has a characteristic Kf value. Solvents with larger Kf constants show a more pronounced freezing point depression for the same solute concentration, making them ideal for cryoscopic molar mass measurements.
| Solvent | Kf (°C·kg/mol) | Normal Freezing Point (°C) |
|---|---|---|
| Water | 1.86 | 0.0 |
| Benzene | 5.12 | 5.5 |
| Acetic Acid | 3.90 | 16.6 |
| Camphor | 37.7 | 179.5 |
| Cyclohexane | 20.2 | 6.5 |
| Carbon Tetrachloride | 30.0 | −22.9 |
| Naphthalene | 6.98 | 80.2 |
| Chloroform | 4.68 | −63.5 |
| Phenol | 7.27 | 40.9 |
| Nitrobenzene | 6.852 | 5.7 |
| Ethanol | 1.99 | −114.1 |
🧪 The van't Hoff Factor (i)
The van't Hoff factor accounts for electrolyte dissociation. For non-electrolytes that do not dissociate (e.g., glucose, sucrose, urea), i = 1. For ionic compounds, i equals the number of ions produced per formula unit:
| Solute | Dissociation | i |
|---|---|---|
| Glucose / Sucrose / Urea | No dissociation | 1 |
| NaCl, KCl, HCl, NaOH | 2 ions | 2 |
| CaCl₂, MgCl₂, Na₂SO₄ | 3 ions | 3 |
| AlCl₃ | 4 ions | 4 |
| Ca₃(PO₄)₂ | 5 ions | 5 |
📊 Worked Example
Problem: What is the new freezing point of a solution of 10 g NaCl dissolved in 1 kg of water?
• Solvent: Water, Kf = 1.86 °C·kg/mol, Tf₀ = 0 °C
• Solute: NaCl (molar mass = 58.44 g/mol), i = 2
• Solvent mass: 1 kg
Moles of NaCl = 10 g ÷ 58.44 g/mol = 0.1711 mol
Molality m = 0.1711 mol ÷ 1 kg = 0.1711 mol/kg
ΔTf = i × Kf × m
ΔTf = 2 × 1.86 × 0.1711 = 0.6369 °C
New freezing point = 0 − 0.6369 = −0.637 °C🎓 Real-World Applications
• Road de-icing: Spreading salt (NaCl or CaCl₂) on roads lowers the freezing point of water, preventing ice formation down to −9 °C (NaCl) or −29 °C (CaCl₂).
• Automotive antifreeze: Ethylene glycol mixed with water depresses the freezing point of the coolant, protecting engines in sub-zero temperatures.
• Food science: Salt and sugar in brines lower the freezing point, allowing food to be stored at colder temperatures without completely freezing.
• Cryoscopy: Scientists measure ΔTf experimentally to determine the molar mass of an unknown solute — a classic analytical technique especially useful for non-volatile, non-ionic substances.
⚠️ Limitations of the Model
The formula ΔTf = i × Kf × m assumes ideal, dilute solutions. At high molalities (typically above 1–2 mol/kg), interactions between solute particles become significant and the real depression deviates from the ideal prediction. For precise work at higher concentrations, activity coefficients and extended Debye–Hückel models should be used. Additionally, the formula does not account for solute-solvent complex formation or partial dissociation of weak electrolytes.
🔗 Related Colligative Properties
Freezing point depression is closely related to three other colligative properties: boiling point elevation (solutes raise the boiling point), vapor pressure lowering (Raoult's Law), and osmotic pressure. All four depend only on the number of dissolved particles and are therefore proportional to molality and the van't Hoff factor — not the chemical nature of the solute.