Originally posted by: E equals MC2
what triggers it to freeze? warmth? friction?
The experiment creates what is called a Supersaturated Solution. Recall that the procedure was to heat water to boiling, add as much Sodium Acetate as it takes to make sure that a little bit of it does not dissolve, and then pour off the clear solution. This means the solution is "saturated" - it has the maximum amount of Sodium Acetate dissolved that it can take. Now, that "maximum amount" is greater for a hot solution than for a cold one. So when the solution is placed in the fridge and cooled to room temperature, it now has 'way too much Sodium Acetate in it. Theoretically, you can't make that solution! Well, as shown here, you can make it, but it is VERY unstable - it wants to get rid of all the excess Sodium Acetate crystals. It is called "Supersaturated". Any small disturbance will trigger the formation of one tiny crystal, and then much more of it will crystallize on that one until the solution returns down to the Saturated state (at room temperature). In this case, so much material crystallizes that the resulting mass is completely solid and just a bit damp.
For some solids being dissolved in a liquid, it takes energy input in the form of heat to break up the crystals and allow them to dissolve. This is called Heat of Solution, and the dissolving process is called "Endothermic" if it needs heat to promote it, as this system of Sodium Acetate in water does; in these cases the solution would get cold if you don't provide outside heat. Now, imagine what happens when you reverse the process - you take a solution and cause it to "un-dissolve", or crystallize out the solid. Then heat is RELEASED and the mixture becomes warm.