Subtitles section Play video
-
What would happen if you poured
-
liquid nitrogen all over your car?
-
Or used it to fight a fire?
-
Or even tried to cool down with it on a hot day?
-
Liquid nitrogen may look like a lot of fun
-
when you're watching people dump everyday objects into it,
-
but it's actually a very dangerous substance.
-
And if someone were to dump you in it,
-
the fun would quickly come to an end.
-
Did you know that hundreds of people voluntarily jumped
-
into a pool of liquid nitrogen?
-
It's true! It happened at a promotional pool party in 2013.
-
By the end of the event, one person was in a coma,
-
and eight others had been rushed to the hospital.
-
Before we go jumping into a whole pool of it,
-
let's get to know liquid nitrogen a little better.
-
Liquid nitrogen, or LN2 as the cool kids call it,
-
is nonflammable, odorless, and colorless;
-
and it creates a notorious fog whenever it's exposed to room temperature air.
-
It can be used to freeze and transport food products,
-
to preserve sperm and eggs,
-
and to remove skin abnormalities, among other things.
-
Recently, its use has been embraced by the public,
-
with chefs and bartenders using it to create fancy ice creams and cocktails.
-
With this new fascination with liquid nitrogen and the fact that's its available to the public,
-
something terrible was bound to happen.
-
And that brings us back to the LN2 pool party that we mentioned before.
-
In an effort to create a smoke effect to impress guests,
-
a resort in Mexico poured four large cans of liquid nitrogen into the hotel pool.
-
It created an impressive fog, but
-
it also did something the organizers didn't know about:
-
it displaced the oxygen around the pool.
-
And with no oxygen, guests couldn't breathe.
-
Luckily though, since it was just four cans of liquid nitrogen that were added slowly,
-
it boiled off in the water before it made contact with anyone's skin.
-
So how much worse would it have been
-
if the entire pool was filled with pure liquid nitrogen?
-
Well, one thing's for sure. You wouldn't want to go for a swim in it.
-
You'd be better off just dipping your hand in quickly.
-
If you were to quickly submerge your hand in liquid nitrogen, it would feel frozen but
-
there wouldn't be any frostbite or damage
-
because of something called the Leidenfrost effect.
-
Because liquid nitrogen boils at the very low temperature of -196 °C (−320 °F),
-
it will bead up and create a layer of vapor underneath it
-
when it touches any surface that's at room temperature,
-
similar to when you drop water onto a flat heated surface.
-
So if you dipped your hand inside liquid nitrogen,
-
a vapor barrier would immediately form that protected your hand from freezing.
-
But the protective barrier would only be temporary.
-
If you were planning on taking a long swim,
-
you wouldn't be coming back out.
-
Instead, you'd get severe frostbite all over your body.
-
Then, the cold would work its way deeper inside you.
-
Muscles, fat, your blood, and every other liquid in your body would be frozen solid.
-
If you kept your head above the surface,
-
your body would freeze underneath you, and you'd sink right down.
-
But hey, on the bright side,
-
there probably wouldn't be much pain involved since
-
the nerve damage would be so severe and occur so quickly.
-
As terrible as this would be for a living creature,
-
it could actually be beneficial for a dead one.
-
Instead of being buried or cremated,
-
some people have chosen to have their bodies frozen when they die.
-
It's called cryogenic freezing.
-
And the idea is that you can be frozen and brought back to life at a later date.
-
But that's a topic for another WHAT IF.