Does the 50% ethylene glycol / water solution absorb heat from the block at a different rate to lower %age concentrations?
Pure ethylene glycol has a specific heat capacity about one half that of water. So, while providing freeze protection and an increased boiling point, ethylene glycol lowers the specific heat capacity of water mixtures relative to pure water. A 50/50 mix by mass has a specific heat capacity of about 0.75 BTU/lb F, thus requiring increased flow rates in same system comparisons with water. Additionally, the increase in boiling point over pure water inhibits nucleate boiling on heat transfer surfaces thus reducing heat transfer efficiency in some cases, such as gasoline engine cylinder walls. Therefore, pure ethylene glycol should not be used as an engine coolant in most cases.
So yes, there`s an efficiency curve of specific heat-transfer potentiality versus peak freeze-limitation......50% glycol for the former and 70% glycol for the latter.
As with most things in life, it`s a trade off of various factors: heat transfer, boil prevention and lowering the freeze point.