the result is Tx=433K. Now, even if this is right [...]
It is not, as you guessed.
Did you already check how much water can freeze?
By the way, the equilibrium state of water does not obey an analytical equation like Cp*ΔT. Instead, it's like "under 0°C it's this way BUT at 0°C it's that AND between 0°C and the boiling point still an other", and this has no good differentiation properties, so attempts to solve it by one single equation like Cp*ΔT, which is analytic, are futile. You do need an "if then" approach.
I understand that, but I have to put it into an equation, and I don't understand how to.
What do you mean "how much water can freeze?".
I have drops at -40°C, every drop becomes ice. When it happens, 100 cal are released.
This quantity of heat goes to the ice, because every drop is thermically isolated.
Now, I have ice at -40°C and 100 cal into it. The analytical way to calculate how it does change temperature is the one I wrote, but it doesn't work, because as you said I have to consider the system in three different parts.
The only thing I can think is:
if 100 cal go to the ice, I have an increase of temperature till it goes to 0°C.
[tex]Cp_{ice}(273-233) = 20 cal[/tex]
So when the drop is at -40°C and absorb 20 calories, it goes to 0°C.
So the 20% of the heat of crystallisation makes the ice go to 0°C.
When it goes to 0°C there's fusion, the fusion absorbs 80 cal for every drop. So we have 20 cal for the change of temperature from 233 to 273K and 80 cal for the fusion. It makes 100cal in total.
Now I don't understand what happens. I have liquid water at 0°C, if it crystallises again there'll be 80 cal released and 80 cal adsorbed from the ice for the fusion and so so on.
Does it make sense?