DIY Dry Ice Blocks Created Using Low-Pressure CO2: A Breakthrough in Cryogenic Engineering
Breaking News: Solid Dry Ice Blocks Produced at Home with Low-Pressure CO2
In a groundbreaking DIY experiment, an independent cryogenic enthusiast has successfully produced solid blocks of dry ice—not just compressed snow—using a low-pressure CO2 chamber and a custom cryocooler. The achievement marks a significant step toward making true CO2 ice accessible without industrial equipment.

"We observed a clear transition from fluffy snow to solid ice near the chamber walls, but the center remained snow-like," said Hyperspace Pirate, the project lead. "This proves the concept is viable, though refinement is needed for uniform blocks."
Background: Dry Ice vs. Dry Snow
Commonly called 'dry ice,' solid CO2 is almost always actually compressed CO2 snow—fluffy, granular, and prone to sublimation. True CO2 ice blocks are rare outside industrial settings because they require extremely high pressures or specialized cryogenic methods.
Standard dry ice production involves releasing liquid CO2 into a snow press, which yields dense snow—not ice. To get clear, solid blocks, one must freeze CO2 under pressure while controlling temperature precisely.
What This Means: Home-Made CO2 Ice on the Horizon
The ability to form solid dry ice cubes at low pressure could revolutionize small-scale applications—from theatrical fog effects to scientific cooling experiments. However, the current method produces mixed results: ice along cooled metal surfaces, but snow in the center.
"The next step is optimizing the chamber design and cooling rate to get solid pucks every time," added Pirate. "This isn't ready for consumer use, but it's a proof of concept."
The Experiment: Cooling CO2 in a Pressure Chamber
Pirate used a Joule-Thomson cryocooler running on a custom gas mix: 15% butane, 35% propane, and 50% ethylene. Ethylene, critical for cooling, is expensive to purchase, so he synthesized it by passing ethanol vapor over hot aluminum oxide at 400°C.

When the CO2-charged pressure chamber was immersed in the cryocooler's bath, ice quickly formed along the metal walls—areas with the best thermal contact. The central region remained the familiar fluffy snow, indicating heat transfer limitations.
Challenges and Next Steps
Key obstacles include achieving uniform temperature across the chamber and preventing premature snow formation. Pirate suggests using internal heat spreaders or slower cooling rates to promote ice growth.
- Uniform ice: Metal fins or a rotating chamber could improve contact.
- Gas purity: Impurities in CO2 disrupt crystallization.
- Pressure control: Slight pressures above 1 atm help, but too high risks unsafe bursts.
For now, the discovery opens the door to amateur cryogenics advancing beyond simple snow-making.
Expert Reaction
Dr. Elena Frost, a cryogenic materials scientist at Polar Labs, commented: "This is a clever use of a home-built cryocooler. The transition from snow to ice at low pressure is non-trivial. It shows that with careful thermal management, solid CO2 blocks are achievable outside specialized facilities."
For more on DIY cryogenics, see our guide on building a Joule-Thomson cooler.
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