
Everything You Need for Your Food Freezing Application
MATHESON’s commitment to your success in Food Freezing begins with the expertise we have assembled to help you address your food freezing application. Our team is experienced in assessing feasibility, freezer sizing, installations (storage vessels, piping, valving, venting), service, upgrades, and systems maintenance.
In addition to on-time nitrogen and liquid carbon dioxide (CO2) deliveries, MATHESON’s Turnkey Food Freezing Solutions include freezers, insulated pipe, installation components, and the expertise to commission them and keep them going.
Dependable Nitrogen and CO2 Delivery.
As a leading suppler of industrial gases, MATHESON offers coast-to-coast bulk supply of liquid nitrogen and liquid CO2. Our centralized operations, sophisticated logistics, and available telemetry ensure our customers of a reliably sustainable and uninterrupted supply of nitrogen and CO2.
Your supply agreement might include the use of your current liquid storage vessel. If not, MATHESON storage vessels are available in a wide range of sizes and configurations, ensuring complete capacity suitability for your application and dimensional suitability for your site.
Liquid Nitrogen
Liquid cylinders
MicroBulk
Delivery to cryogenic vessels
Onsite production

Liquid Carbon Dioxide
Liquid cylinders
MicroBulk
Delivery to cryogenic vessels
Other Cryogens
Other cryogens, such as liquid oxygen, liquid argon, liquid nitrous oxide, and liquid helium are also available, and may be desired for certain applications. Contact Us for more information.

Freezing with Cryogenic Liquids
Liquid nitrogen (or other cryogens or liquid carbon dioxide) freezing has many advantages over mechanical freezing and chilling processes:
- Faster
- Colder
- More flexible
- Takes up less space
- Lower maintenance
Cryogenic freezing also helps minimize dehydration of the frozen items, while retaining item quality, texture, color, and flavor.
View our tabular comparison of cryogenic freezing vs mechanical freezing:
Cryogenic vs. Mechanical Freezing
Refer to the data sheet below for the differences between liquid nitrogen and carbon dioxide:
Liquid Nitrogen vs. Carbon Dioxide