The surface-area-to-volume ratio (SA:V) explains why crushed ice cools a drink faster than a single large cube of the same total volume. Smaller pieces have proportionally more surface in contact with the liquid.
SA:V Ratio Formulas for Common Shapes
Sphere: SA:V = 3/r (where r = radius)
As the object gets smaller, the ratio gets larger — more surface per unit volume.
Worked Example — Crushed Ice vs Ice Cube
| Scenario | Volume | Total Surface Area | SA:V |
|---|---|---|---|
| One 3 cm cube | 27 cm³ | 54 cm² | 2.0 |
| 27 cubes × 1 cm | 27 cm³ | 162 cm² | 6.0 |
SA:V in Biology — Why Cells Stay Small
As a sphere grows, volume increases as r³ but surface only as r². Large cells cannot exchange nutrients fast enough through their membrane. This is why organisms use many small cells, not fewer large ones.
SA:V in Cooking — Faster Caramelisation
Diced vegetables cook faster because more surface contacts the heat source. Marinating works faster with smaller pieces for the same reason — higher SA:V means more flavour absorption.
SA:V in Engineering — Heat Exchangers
Heat exchangers use fins to maximise SA:V. Catalyst pellets are made small and porous. Computer and car radiators maximise surface exposed to coolant.
Calculate SA:V Ratio
Use the Cube Calculator and Sphere Calculator to compute SA, then divide by volume. See sphere derivation and composite shapes.