I doubt you're going to find something with a heat of fusion much better than water.. But having an added substance to lower the freezing point might
be helpful. If you use straight water, it wouldn't start actually helping cool much until above 0*C, but with something like glycol-water it would
kick in down at -40*C... and I'm sure there are better additives than that. I'm not sure how the structural integrity of the ice slabs would be
effected by the additive..
Since solid CO2 would keep at those temperatures, having a large amount of it (maybe make the shelves out if somehow?) would provide a huge "buffer"
effect as soon as the temp got up to -78.5*C... It would also absorb twice as much energy pound for pound compared to ice. And it would conveniently
sublimate to gas instead of forming a puddle... |