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  • Now that winter’s here, the weather fiends out

  • there are waiting for the next big snowstorm.

  • But before the flakes fall, armies of trucks

  • are loaded full of one of the most important

  • road safety tools out theresalt.

  • Along with keeping our french fries on point,

  • salt, like sodium chloride,

  • has actually saved a lot of lives,

  • and probably even more fenders thanks

  • to its incredible deicing abilities.

  • (REACTIONS SPLASH)

  • So here’s a truck throwing salt

  • all over a wintery road.

  • Like everything else in the picture,

  • you can bet that that salt is pretty cold.

  • This begs the questionhow be that

  • something that isn’t hot is melting the ice?

  • Turns out, salt isn’t actually about melting.

  • It’s all about freezing.

  • The freezing point of pure water rests at

  • 32 degrees Fahrenheit, or 0 degrees Celsius.

  • When the temperature of water reaches

  • the freezing point, its normally

  • free-flowing molecules get trapped

  • into an organized crystal structures.

  • This is how ice is formed.

  • Salt disrupts this process.

  • Upon hitting water,

  • salt breaks up into two ions:

  • one sodium and one chloride.

  • These two ions then move around

  • and take up space in between

  • water molecules, pushing them apart

  • and frustrating their potential

  • links to form ice. This disruption

  • is called freezing point depression.

  • So to put it simply, salt lowers

  • the freezing point of water.

  • But there’s a limit.

  • Salt can only act as a stable

  • deicer in temperatures above

  • 16 degrees Fahrenheit (-9 C).

  • And there’s another drawback to salt.

  • Considering that over 20 million tons of

  • road salt is used annually in the U.S.,

  • all that salt has to go somewhere in the spring.

  • Of those two ions split from dissolved salt,

  • the chloride ions can have a potentially

  • negative effect on the environment.

  • Chloride can kill small aquatic critters,

  • dehydrate and kill plants,

  • alter the composition of ground soil

  • near roads, and can limit water

  • circulation that keeps lakes healthy.

  • All that salt is also corrosive to metal,

  • wreaking havoc on infrastructure.

  • And oh yeah, your wheels too.

  • For these reasons, Sand is used as

  • an abrasive for an alternative.

  • Sand is often used because it’s

  • cheap and maybe cuz folks want

  • to avoid the chloride issues.

  • The thing is, salts have a

  • chemical advantage: because you get

  • 2 or more ions when they dissolve,

  • you get way more melting power

  • for the same handful of deicer.

  • So sand might be cheap, but you have

  • to use way more of the stuff, and

  • that can leave quite the mess.

  • Now for super cold temperatures,

  • sodium chloride in sand won’t do the job.

  • Some alternatives that melt ice better

  • include Magnesium Chloride, Calcium Chloride,

  • Potassium Chloride, and Potassium acetate.

  • Potassium acetate is particularly incredible

  • at deicing because it works at temperatures

  • as low as -75 degree Celsius, while the rest

  • of the bunch work around the -20 degree mark.

  • Although these alternative chemicals

  • are better at deicing at lower

  • temperatures, most of them have that

  • environment damaging Chloride too,

  • not to mention that they cost

  • way more than that table salt.

  • And if youre buying 20 million

  • tons a year of the stuffwell,

  • that’s a lot of money!

  • So people, keep your eyes on the road, and

  • thank salt for the fine driving conditions.

  • Or, on the other hand, you can shake

  • your fist at it, if you didn’t get

  • that snow day you know you DESERVE.

  • Make sure to check out this video

  • on how artificial snow is made,

  • and because were talking about

  • ice here, check out this one about

  • mind-bogglingly interesting crystal facts.

  • Thanks for watching folks, Don’t forget

  • to subscribe and well catch you soon.

Now that winter’s here, the weather fiends out

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