Thanks for the info guys.
If I could fill in the blanks a bit here and why I am asking this, I live in Africa, in a place where it gets rather hot, in summer, our average temperature is 33 degrees celcius, hitting up to 45 on certain days.
Now, I've recently found a love for ice skating, which obviously isn't something we can find just anywhere here. In the country I live, there exists only one, tiny, ice rink. The costs for keeping the ice frozen is quite extreme, having the actual freezer unit and 10 massive aircons running day and night to keep the ice frozen.
There is an alternative, called synthetic ice, but it's not ice at all, it is instead a high-density plastic, which is horrible.
So I'm looking for some insight from a chemical-view, if there even exists another possible solution, a sort of cheap-ish resin, something that could solidify into an ice substitute, which does not need such extreme cooling.
I am not looking at only water, but any cheapish liquid that could solidify like this. Obviously water with an additive would be the cheapest solution, but as has been said, it seems this does not exist just yet.
Much appreciate your inputs guys.
Regards,
Brian