Gritting Icy Roads - The Chemistry
Here in the UK, snowfall is a relatively rare occurrence. When we finally do get our white Christmas, it wreaks havoc on the unprepared transport system, providing a convenient excuse for many 'not to make it in' to work or school.
Road gritting is a crucial tool in reducing the risk of accident on dangerous wintry roads, and the bane of opportunistic teenage truants worldwide.
Common sense surmises that grit must have some chemical effect on ice, but how does gritting return treacherous highways to commute-ready roads overnight?
What Is Road Gritting?
Road gritting is a process during which rock salt - specifically, halite, a mineral comprising sodium and chlorine - is applied to icy road surfaces.
In a basic sense, gritting 'melts the ice'. This can be misleading; some may infer that the grit reacts chemically with ice, but this is not the mechanism at play. Rather than changing the chemical makeup of the ice, gritting salt expands the liquid phase temperature region by lowering the freezing point of the road's surface.
Freezing Point
Most water molecules in the liquid state possess enough kinetic energy to overcome the crystalline structure favoured by intermolecular hydrogen bonding. Approaching 0 °(Celsius or Fahrenheit, not Kelvin!) the average water molecule has lesser energy and experiences a greater attractive force from its less spaced neighbours. It can no longer escape the structure, and octagonal crystals form - ice.
Hydrogen bonding in water/ice around the solid-liquid phase boundary.
Introduce grit and the bonding situation changes. The dissolved ions, positively charged sodium and negatively charged chloride, hamper hydrogen bonding. The partially polar water molecules are more strongly attracted to the ions than they are to each other, and the substance remains a liquid even at 0 °C.
The water will remain in the liquid phase so long as the ambient temperature provides its molecules with enough kinetic energy to overcome the effects of these weakened, ion-affected hydrogen bonds.
Salt ions interact with areas of charge within water molecules.
Gritted water typically has a freezing point between -4 ° and -10 °C, meaning even sub-zero road surfaces remain ice-free.
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Depending on the location and climate, some places use beet juice as it is less corrosive to concrete and metal. This is in the U.S. and I am not sure it is used in other places.
Linking an image to a google search result is not crediting the artist/photographer. At the very least you should visit the page you found it and provide that link.
Usually you can find the original source within 15-20 seconds you can simply copy over, but ideally you can try using this:
https://www.google.com/advanced_image_search
Put your search term in the top but down at the bottom you can select what kind of license in 'usage rights'. Choose 'free to use or share, even commercially'
Good luck!
Thanks for the tip, I'll do that in future.