Thursday, April 28, 2011

Burning Money - Chemistry Demonstration






This is a neat 'magic trick' that illustrates the process of combustion, the flammability of alcohol, and the special qualities of the material used to make currency.


Scientific Concept behind Burning Money
A combustion reaction occurs between alcohol and oxygen, producing heat and light (energy) and carbon dioxide and water.
C2H5OH + 4 O2 -> 2 CO2 + 3 H2O + energy
When the bill is soaked an alcohol-water solution, the alcohol has a high vapor pressure and is mainly on the outside of the material (a bill is more like fabric than paper, which is nice, if you've ever accidentally washed one). When the bill is lit, the alcohol is what actually burns. The temperature at which the alcohol burns is not high enough to evaporate the water, which has a high specific heat, so the bill remains wet and isn't able to catch fire on its own. After the alcohol has burned, the flame goes out, leaving a slightly damp dollar bill.


Here's what you need to do the demonstration...
  • dollar bill (higher denomination if you're brave)
  • tongs
  • matches or a lighter
  • salt 
  • solution of 50% alcohol and 50% water (you can mix 95% alcohol with water in a 1:1 ratio, if desired)
 Have you gathered your materials? Let's burn money...
  1. Prepare the alcohol and water solution. You can mix 50 ml of water with 50 ml of 95-100% alcohol.
  2. Add a pinch salt or other colorant to the alcohol/water solution, to help produce a visible flame.
  3. Soak a dollar bill in the alcohol/water solution so that it is thoroughly wet.
  4. Use tongs to pick up the bill. Allow any excess liquid to drain. Move the damp bill away from the alcohol-water solution.
  5. Light the bill on fire and allow it to burn until the flame goes out.

How To Do Paper Chromatography With Leaves

Most plants contain several pigment molecules, so experiment with different leaves to see the wide range of pigments.
 
Difficulty: Average
Time Required: 2 hours
 

What You Need:

  • Leaves
  • Baby Food Jars with Lids
  • Rubbing Alcohol
  • Coffee Filters
  • Hot Water
  • Shallow Pan
  • Kitchen Utensils

Here's How:

  1. Take 2-3 large leaves (or the equivalent with smaller leaves), tear them into tiny pieces, and place them into small jars with lids.
  2. Add enough alcohol to just cover the leaves.
  3. Loosely cover the jars and set them into a shallow pan containing an inch or so of hot tap water.
  4. Let the jars sit in the hot water for at least a half hour. Replace the hot water as it cools and swirl the jars from time to time.
  5. The jars are 'done' when the alcohol has picked up color from the leaves. The darker the color, the brighter the chromatogram will be.
  6. Cut or tear a long strip of coffee filter paper for each jar.
  7. Place one strip of paper into each jar, with one end in the alcohol and the other outside of the jar.
  8. As the alcohol evaporates, it will pull the pigment up the paper, separating pigments according to size (largest will move the shortest distance).
  9. After 30-90 minutes (or until the desired separation is obtained), remove the strips of paper and allow them to dry.
  10. Can you identify which pigments are present? Does the season in which the leaves are picked affect their colors?

Tips:

  1. Try using frozen chopped spinach leaves.
  2. Experiment with other types of paper.
  3. You can substitute other alcohols for the rubbing alcohol, such as ethyl alcohol or methyl alcohol.
  4. If your chromatogram is pale, next time use more leaves and/or smaller pieces to yield more pigment.

 

Make Ice Cream in a Baggie






Materials


  • 1/2 cup milk
  • 1/2 cup whipping cream (heavy cream)
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 1/4 teaspoon vanilla or vanilla flavoring (vanillin)
  • 1/2 to 3/4 cup sodium chloride (NaCl) as table salt or rock salt
  • 2 cups ice
  • 1-quart ZiplocTM bag
  • 1-gallon ZiplocTM bag
  • themometer
  • measuring cups and spoons
  • cups and spoons for eating your treat! 
Procedure

  1. Add 1/4 cup sugar, 1/2 cup milk, 1/2 cup whipping cream, and 1/4 teaspoon vanilla to the quart ziplocTM bag. Seal the bag securely.
  2. Put 2 cups of ice into the gallon ziplocTM bag.
  3. Use a thermometer to measure and record the temperature of the ice in the gallon bag.
  4. Add 1/2 to 3/4 cup salt (sodium chloride) to the bag of ice.
  5. Place the sealed quart bag inside the gallon bag of ice and salt. Seal the gallon bag securely.
  6. Gently rock the gallon bag from side to side. It's best to hold it by the top seal or to have gloves or a cloth between the bag and your hands because the bag will be cold enough to damage your skin.
  7. Continue to rock the bag for 10-15 minutes or until the contents of the quart bag have solidified into ice cream.
  8. Open the gallon bag and use the thermometer to measure and record the temperature of the ice/salt mixture.
  9. Remove the quart bag, open it, serve the contents into cups with spoons and ENJOY!
Explanation
Ice has to absorb energy in order to melt, changing the phase of water from a solid to a liquid. When you use ice to cool the ingredients for ice cream, the energy is absorbed from the ingredients and from the outside environment (like your hands, if you are holding the baggie of ice!). When you add salt to the ice, it lowers the freezing point of the ice, so even more energy has to be absorbed from the environment in order for the ice to melt. This makes the ice colder than it was before, which is how your ice cream freezes. Ideally, you would make your ice cream using 'ice cream salt', which is just salt sold as large crystals instead of the small crystals you see in table salt. The larger crystals take more time to dissolve in the water around the ice, which allows for even cooling of the ice cream.
You could use other types of salt instead of sodium chloride, but you couldn't substitute sugar for the salt because (a) sugar doesn't dissolve well in cold water and (b) sugar doesn't dissolve into multiple particles, like an ionic material such as salt. Compounds that break into two pieces upon dissolving, like NaCl breaks into Na+ and Cl-, are better at lowering the freezing point than substances that don't separate into particles because the added particles disrupt the ability of the water to form crystalline ice. The more particles there are, the greater the disruption and the greater the impact on particle-dependent properties (colligative properties) like freezing point depresssion, boiling point elevation, and osmotic pressure. The salt causes the ice to absorb more energy from the environment (becoming colder), so although it lowers the point at which water will re-freeze into ice, you can't add salt to very cold ice and expect it to freeze your ice cream or de-ice a snowy sidewalk (water has to be present!). This is why NaCl isn't used to de-ice sidewalks in areas that are very cold.

How To Do a Vinegar & Baking Soda Foam Fight

This is a twist on the classic baking soda volcano, where you use the ingredients to make squirt-able fountains of foam.
 
Difficulty: Easy
Time Required: Mere Minutes
 

What You Need:

  • empty compressible plastic bottle - no lids
  • water
  • diswashing detergent
  • baking soda
  • vinegar
  • food coloring (optional)

Here's How:

  1. First, you need bottles for everyone. The classic 2-liter bottle is nice because it's compressible and holds a large volume. Gatorade bottles are also good because they have wide mouths, so it's easier to recharge the bottle.
  2. Fill each bottle most of the way full of warm water and add a squirt of dishwashing detergent.
  3. Gather the rest of the materials you will need: lots of vinegar and baking soda and food coloring if you want colored bubbles. Be advised: adding food coloring could result in staining of clothing and other surfaces.
  4. Add some baking soda to the bottle (couple of tablespoons or so). Put your hand over the bottle opening and shake it up to get the detergent water all sudsy. Drip a bit of food coloring onto the suds.
  5. Note: if you add the food coloring before shaking the detergent water, then the dye will go into the water and the bubbles will be clear. If you add the coloring just prior to adding the vinegar then the bubbles will be deeply colored (which also increases the staining potential).
  6. Pour in some vinegar. This starts the reaction. Feel free to give the bottle a little squeeze to help things along. Do NOT seal the bottle with a cap or lid. That basically makes a baking soda bomb, which is dangerous.
  7. You can recharge the reaction with more baking soda and then more vinegar. If at any time you feel like shaking up the bottle only do this with your hand over the opening and never cap or seal the bottle.
  8. The foam fight part most people figure out on their own. Have fun!

Tips:

  1. Avoid getting the mixture into your eyes or mouth. If eye contact occurs, rinse the solution out. Don't drink the contents of the foam fight bottle.
  2. Avoid contact with unreacted vinegar or undiluted dishwashing detergent. Both can irritate skin and mucous membranes.

 

Density Column



Make a density column with many liquid layers using common household liquids. This is an easy, fun and colorful science project that illustrates the concept of density.

Density Column Materials

You can use some or all of these liquids, depending on how many layers you want and which materials you have handy. These liquids are listed from most-dense to least-dense, so this is the order in which you pour them into the column.
  1. honey
  2. corn syrup or pancake syrup
  3. liquid dishwashing soap
  4. water (can be colored with food coloring)
  5. vegetable oil
  6. rubbing alcohol (can be colored with food coloring)
  7. lamp oil 

Make the Density Column

Pour your heaviest liquid into the center of whatever container you are using to make your column. If you can avoid it, don't let the first liquid run down the side of the the container because the first liquid is thick enough it will probably stick to the side so your column won't end up as pretty. Carefully pour the next liquid you are using down the side of the container. Another way to add the liquid is to pour it over the back of a spoon. Continue adding liquids until you have completed your density column. At this point, you can use the column as a decoration. Try to avoid bumping the container or mixing its contents. The hardest liquids to deal with are the water, vegetable oil, and rubbing alcohol. Make sure that there is an even layer of oil before you add the alcohol because if there is a break in that surface or if you pour the alcohol so that it dips below the oil layer into the water then the two liquids will mix. If you take your time, this problem can be avoided.

How the Density Column Works

You made your column by pouring the heaviest liquid into the glass first, followed by the next-heaviest liquid, etc. The heaviest liquid has the most mass per unit volume or the highest density. Some of the liquids don't mix because they repel each other (oil and water). Other liquids resist mixing because they are thick or viscous. Eventually some of the liquids of your column will mix together.

How To Color Fire






I know I'm not the only person who has rummaged through old magazines and newspapers, looking for highly colored pages to throw onto a fire to make colored flames. This method of coloring fire, while fun, is hit-and-miss. Have you ever wanted to know how to color the fire reliably? I've compiled a list of colorants and simple instructions for using them. Here are some of your options:
  • Toss dry colorants onto the flames.
  • Soak logs in an alcohol solution of colorants.
  • Soak logs in an aqueous (water) solution of colorants and allow the logs to dry. 
  • Prepare pinecones, sawdust, or cork with colorants.
In general, there is no specific proportion of colorant to mix with the water or alcohol. Add as much powdered colorant as will dissolve in the liquid (roughly a half pound colorant to a gallon of water). Do not attempt to mix colors together - you will probably end up with a normal yellow flame. If you want multicolored fire, try adding several pinecones, each treated with a single colorant, or scatter a mixture of dried colored sawdusts across the fire.

How to Prepare Pinecones or Sawdust
It's easy! Remember to do this procedure separately for each color. You can combine dry pinecones or sawdust with different colorants later.
  1. Pour water into a bucket. Use sufficient water to be able to wet your pinecones, sawdust, or waste cork. Skip to step 3 if you purchased your colorant in liquid form.
  2. Stir in colorant until you can't dissolve any more. For sawdust or waste cork, you may also add some liquid glue, which will allow the pieces to stick together and form larger chunks.
  3. Add the pinecones, sawdust, or cork. Mix to form an even coat.
  4. Let the material soak in the colorant mixture for several hours or overnight.
  5. Spread the pieces out to dry. If desired, pinecones may be placed in a paper or mesh bag. You can spread sawdust or cork out on paper, which will also produce colored flames.
How to Prepare Logs
Follow steps 1 and 2 above and either roll a log around in the container (big container, small log) or else pour and spread the mixture onto the logs. Wear kitchen or other protective gloves to protect your hands. Allow the logs to dry. If you make your own newspaper logs, you can smear colorant onto the paper before rolling it.
Points to Keep in Mind

  • The element sodium burns with the usual yellow flame. The presence of this element can overwhelm any other color. If you are making a dry mixture of colorants or colored pinecones/sawdust, you should avoid including any colorant that has sodium in it.
  • If you are using alcohol-based colorants: Remember that alcohol is flammable. If you don't allow it to evaporate before use, you will get a lighter-fluid effect. Use with care!
  • Don't color BBQ fire! The colorants may produce pretty flames, but they can also produce toxic food.
  • Keep the colorants away from children and handle them with the care and respect due to potentially hazardous chemicals. Read and adhere to any warnings listed on product labels.
Now, here is the list of colorants. Most can be found in a grocery or dry goods store, in the laundry or cleaner section. Look for copper sulfate in swimming pool supplies (already in water, which is fine). Potassium chloride is used as a salt substitute and may be found in the spice section. Epsom salts, borax, and calcium chloride may be found with laundry/cleaning supplies. Others, including strontium chloride, can be obtained from stores that specialize in rocketry or firework supplies.

Flame Colorants

Color Chemical
Carmine Lithium Chloride
Red Strontium Chloride
Orange Calcium Chloride (a bleaching powder)
Yellow Sodium Chloride (table salt)
or Sodium Carbonate
Yellowish Green Borax
Green Copper Sulfate or Boric Acid
Blue Copper Chloride
Violet 3 parts Potassium Sulfate
1 part Potassium Nitrate (saltpeter)
Purple Potassium Chloride
White Magnesium Sulfate (Epsom salts)

Hot Ice or Sodium Acetate


Sodium acetate or hot ice is an amazing chemical you can prepare yourself from baking soda and vinegar. You can cool a solution of sodium acetate below its melting point and then cause the liquid to crystallize. The crystallization is an exothermic process, so the resulting ice is hot. Solidification occurs so quickly you can form sculptures as you pour the hot ice.

Sodium Acetate or Hot Ice Materials

  • 1 liter clear vinegar (weak acetic acid)
  • 4 tablespoons baking soda (sodium bicarbonate)

Prepare the Sodium Acetate or Hot Ice

  1. In a saucepan or large beaker, add baking soda to the vinegar, a little at a time and stirring between additions. The baking soda and vinegar react to form sodium acetate and carbon dioxide gas. If you don't add the baking soda slowly, you'll essentially get a baking soda and vinegar volcano, which would overflow your container. You've made the sodium acetate, but it is too dilute to be very useful, so you need to remove most of the water. Here is the reaction between the baking soda and vinegar to produce the sodium acetate:
    Na+[HCO3] + CH3–COOH → CH3–COO Na+ + H2O + CO2
  2. Boil the solution to concentrate the sodium acetate. You could just remove the solution from heat once you have 100-150 ml of solution remaining, but the easiest way to get good results is to simply boil the solution until a crystal skin or film starts to form on the surface. This took me about an hour on the stove over medium heat. If you use lower heat you are less likely to get yellow or brown liguid, but it will take longer. If discoloration occurs, it's okay.
  3. Once you remove the sodium acetate solution from heat, immediately cover it to prevent any further evaporation. I poured my solution into a separate container and covered it with plastic wrap. You should not have any crystals in your solution. If you do have crystals, stir a very small amount of water or vinegar into the solution, just sufficient to dissolve the crystals.
  4. Place the covered container of sodium acetate solution in the refrigerator to chill.

Activities Involving Hot Ice

The sodium acetate in the solution in the refrigerator is an example of a supercooled liquid. That is, the sodium acetate exists in liquid form below its usual melting point. You can initiate crystallization by adding a small crystal of sodium acetate or possibly even by touching the surface of the sodium acetate solution with a spoon or finger. The crystallization is an example of an exothermic process. Heat is released as the 'ice' forms. To demonstrate supercooling, crystallization, and heat release you could:
  • Drop a crystal into the container of cooled sodium acetate solution. The sodium acetate will crystallize within seconds, working outward from where you added the crystal. The crystal acts as a nucleation site or seed for rapid crystal growth. Although the solution just came out of the refrigerator, if you touch the container you will find it is now warm or hot.
  • Pour the solution onto a shallow dish. If the hot ice does not spontaneously begin crystallization, you can touch it with a crystal of sodium acetate (you can usually scrape a small amount of sodium acetate from the side of the container you used earlier). The crystallization will progress from the dish up toward where you are pouring the liquid. You can construct towers of hot ice. The towers will be warm to the touch.
  • You can re-melt sodium acetate and re-use it for demonstrations.

Hot Ice Safety

As you would expect, sodium acetate is a safe chemical for use in demonstrations. It is used as a food additive to enhance flavor and is the active chemical in many hot packs. The heat generated by the crystallization of a refrigerated sodium acetate solution should not present a burn hazard.

How To Make Invisible Ink - Baking Soda







These are instructions for making non-toxic invisible ink using baking soda (sodium bicarbonate).
Difficulty: Easy
Time Required: A Few Minutes

What You Need:

  • Baking Soda
  • Paper
  • Water
  • Light Bulb (heat source)
  • Paintbrush or Swab
  • Measuring Cup
  • Purple Grape Juice (opt.)

Here's How:

  1. There are at least two methods to use baking soda as an invisible ink. Mix equal parts water and baking soda.
  2. Use a cotton swab, toothpick, or paintbrush to write a message onto white paper, using the baking soda solution as 'ink'.
  3. Allow the ink to dry.
  4. One way to read the message is to hold the paper up to a heat source, such as a light bulb. The baking soda will cause the writing in the paper to turn brown.
  5. A second method to read the message is to paint over the paper with purple grape juice. The message will appear in a different color.

Tips:

  1. If you are using the heating method, avoid igniting the paper - don't use a halogen bulb.
  2. Baking soda and grape juice react with each other in an acid-base reaction, producing a color change in the paper.
  3. The baking soda mixture can also be used more diluted, with one part baking soda to two parts water.
  4. Grape juice concentrate results in a more visible color change than regular grape juice.

Chemistry Fun with Pennies


Use pennies, nails, and a few simple household ingredients to explore some of the properties of metals:

Materials

  • 20-30 dull pennies
  • 1/4 cup white vinegar (dilute acetic acid)
  • 1 teaspoon salt (NaCl)
  • 1 shallow, clear glass or plastic bowl (not metal)
  • 1-2 clean steel screws or nails
  • water 
  • measuring spoons
  • paper towels 
Shiny Clean Pennies

  1. Pour the salt and vinegar into the bowl.
  2. Stir until the salt dissolves.
  3. Dip a penny halfway into the liquid and hold it there for 10-20 seconds. Remove the penny from the liquid. What do you see?
  4. Dump the rest of the pennies into the liquid. The cleaning action will be visible for several seconds. Leave the pennies in the liquid for 5 minutes.
  5. Proceed to 'Instant Verdigris!'
Pennies get dull over time because the copper in the pennies slowly reacts with air to form copper oxide. Pure copper metal is bright and shiny, but the oxide is dull and greenish. When you place the pennies in the salt and vinegar solution, the acetic acid from the vinegar dissolves the copper oxide, leaving behind shiny clean pennies. The copper from the copper oxide stays in the liquid. You could use other acids instead of vinegar, like lemon juice.

Instant Verdigris!

  1. Note: You want to keep the liquid you used to clean the pennies, so don't dump it down the drain!
  2. After the 5 minutes required for 'Shiny Clean Pennies', take half of the pennies out of the liquid and place them on a paper towel to dry.
  3. Remove the rest of the pennies and rinse them well under running water. Place these pennies on a second paper towel to dry.
  4. Allow about an hour to pass and take a look at the pennies you have placed on the paper towels. Write labels on your paper towels so you will know which towel has the rinsed pennies.
  5. While you are waiting for the pennies to do their thing on the paper towels, use the salt and vinegar solution to make 'Copper Plated Nails'.
Rinsing the pennies with water stops the reaction between the salt/vinegar and the pennies. They will slowly turn dull again over time, but not quickly enough for you to watch! On the other hand, the salt/vinegar residue on the unrinsed pennies promotes a reaction between the copper and the oxygen in the air. The resulting blue-green copper oxide is commonly called 'verdigris'. It is a type of patina found on a metal, similar to tarnish on silver. The oxide forms in nature as well, producing minerals such as malachite and azurite.

Copper Plated Nails

  1. Place a nail or screw so that it is half in and half out of the solution you used to clean the pennies. If you have a second nail/screw, you can let it sit completely immersed in the solution.
  2. Do you see bubbles rising from the nail or the threads of the screw?
  3. Allow 10 minutes to pass and then take a look at the nail/screw. Is it two different colors? If not, return the nail to its position and check it again after an hour.
The copper that coats the nail/screw comes from the pennies. However, it exists in the salt/vinegar solution as positively charged copper ions as opposed to neutral copper metal. Nails and screws are made of steel, an alloy primarily composed of iron. The salt/vinegar solution dissolves some of the iron and its oxides on the surface of the nail, leaving a negative charge on the surface of the nail. Opposite charges attract, but the copper ions are more strongly attracted to the nail than the iron ions, so a copper coating forms on the nail. At the same time, the reactions involving the hydrogen ions from the acid and the metal/oxides produce some hydrogen gas, which bubbles up from the site of the reaction - the surface of the nail or screw.

How To Make a Mentos & Diet Soda Chemical Volcano Eruption




Chemical volcanos are classic projects for science fairs and chemistry demonstrations. The mentos and diet soda volcano is similar to the baking soda volcano, except the eruption is really powerful, capable of producing jets of soda several feet high. It's messy, so you might want to do this project outdoors or in a bathroom. It's also non-toxic, so kids can do this project.
 
Difficulty: Easy
Time Required: chemical volcano takes a few minutes to set up and erupts for a few seconds
 

What You Need:

  • roll of mentos candies
  • 2-liter bottle of diet soda
  • index card
  • test tube or sheet of paper
  • a mop for cleanup

Here's How:

  1. First, gather your supplies. You can substitute another candy for the Mentos, such as M&Ms or Skittles, but ideally you want candies that stack into a neat column with minimal space between them, have a chalky consistency, and barely fit through the mouth of a 2-liter bottle.
  2. Similarly, you could substitute normal soda for diet soda. The project will work just as well, but the resulting eruption will be sticky. Whatever you use, the beverage has to be carbonated!
  3. First, you need to stack the candies. The easiest way to do this is to stack them in a test tube narrow enough to form a single column. Otherwise, you can roll a sheet of paper into a tube just barely wide enough for a stack of candies.
  4. Place an index card over the opening of the test tube or end of the paper tube to hold the candies in the container. Invert the test tube.
  5. Open your full 2-liter bottle of diet soda. The eruption happens very quickly, so set things up: you want the open bottle - index card - roll of candies so that as soon as you remove the index card, the candies will drop smoothly into the bottle.
  6. When you're ready, do it! You can repeat the eruption with the same bottle and another stack of candies. Have fun!

 

How To Grow a Borax Crystal Snowflake

 
Do real snowflakes melt too quickly? Grow a borax crystal snowflake, color it blue if you like, and enjoy the sparkle all year long!
 
Difficulty: Average
Time Required: Overnight

What You Need:

  • string
  • wide mouth jar (pint)
  • white pipe cleaners
  • borax (see tips)
  • pencil
  • boiling water
  • blue food coloring (opt.)
  • scissors

Here's How:

  1. The first step of making borax crystal snowflakes is to make the snowflake shape. Cut a pipe cleaner into three equal sections.
  2. Twist the sections together at their centers to form a six-sided snowflake shape. Don't worry if an end isn't even, just trim to get the desired shape. The snowflake should fit inside the jar.
  3. Tie the string to the end of one of the snowflake arms. Tie the other end of the string to the pencil. You want the length to be such that the pencil hangs the snowflake into the jar.
  4. Fill the widemouth pint jar with boiling water.
  5. Add borax one tablespoon at a time to the boiling water, stirring to dissolve after each addition. The amount used is 3 tablespoons borax per cup of water. It is okay if some undissolved borax settles to the bottom of the jar.
  6. If desired, you may tint the mixture with food color.
  7. Hang the pipe cleaner snowflake into the jar so that the pencil rests on top of the jar and the snowflake is completely covered with liquid and hangs freely (not touching the bottom of the jar).
  8. Allow the jar to sit in an undisturbed location overnight.
  9. Look at the pretty crystals!!! You can hang your snowflake as a decoration or in a window to catch the sunlight :-)

Tips:

  1. Borax is available at grocery stores in the laundry soap section, such as 20 Mule Team Borax Laundry Booster. Do not use Boraxo soap.
  2. Because boiling water is used and because borax isn't intended for eating, adult supervision is recommended for this project.
  3. If you can't find borax, you can use sugar or salt (may take longer to grow the crystals, so be patient). Add sugar or salt to the boiling water until it stops dissolving. Ideally you want no crystals at the bottom of the jar.

 

How To Make Slime

 
There are lots of recipes for slime. Since most recipes are easy, look for one using ingredients you have on hand.
 
Difficulty: Easy
Time Required: 15 mins
 
What You Need:
  • borax powder
  • water
  • 4 ounce (120 ml) glue (e.g., Elmer's white glue)
  • teaspoon
  • bowl
  • jar or measuring cup
  • food coloring (optional)
  • measuring cup

Here's How:

  1. Pour the glue into the jar. If you have a big bottle of glue, you want 4 oz or 1/2 cup of glue.
  2. Fill the empty glue bottle with water and stir it into the glue (or add 1/2 cup of water).
  3. If desired, add food coloring. Otherwise, the slime will be an opaque white.
  4. In a separate, mix one cup (240 ml) of water into the bowl and add 1 teaspoon (5 ml) of borax powder.
  5. Slowly stir the glue mixture into the bowl of borax solution.
  6. Place the slime that forms into your hands and knead until it feels dry. (Don't worry about the excess water remaining in the bowl.)
  7. The more the slime is played with, the firmer and less sticky it will become.
  8. Have fun!
  9. Store your slime in a zip-lock bag in the fridge (otherwise it will develop mold).

Tips:

  1. Use white glue, such as Elmer's brand. Most 'school glues' do not have the correct composition.
  2. Don't eat the slime - it isn't especially toxic, but not good for you either!
  3. Slime cleans up pretty easily. Remove dried slime after soaking with water.

 

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

How To Build a Baking Soda Volcano

 
 
Okay, the baking soda volcano is the kitchen equivalent of a volcano, not a real one. It's cool all the same! The baking soda volcano is also non-toxic, which adds to its appeal.
 
Difficulty: Average
Time Required: 30 minutes

What You Need:

  • 6 cups flour
  • 2 cups salt
  • 4 tablespoons cooking oil
  • warm water
  • plastic soda bottle
  • dishwashing detergent
  • food coloring
  • vinegar
  • baking dish or other pan
  • 2 T baking soda
 Here's How:
  1. First make the 'cone' of the baking soda volcano. Mix 6 cups flour, 2 cups salt, 4 tablespoons cooking oil, and 2 cups of water. The resulting mixture should be smooth and firm (more water may be added if needed).
  2. Stand the soda bottle in the baking pan and mold the dough around it into a volcano shape. Don't cover the hole or drop dough into it.
  3. Fill the bottle most of the way full with warm water and a bit of red food color (can be done before sculpting if you don't take so long that the water gets cold).
  4. Add 6 drops of detergent to the bottle contents. The detergent helps trap the bubbles produced by the reaction so you get better lava.
  5. Add 2 tablespoons baking soda to the liquid.
  6. Slowly pour vinegar into the bottle. Watch out - eruption time!

Tips:

  1. The cool red lava is the result of a chemical reaction between the baking soda and vinegar.
  2. In this reaction, carbon dioxide gas is produced, which is also present in real volcanoes.
  3. As the carbon dioxide gas is produced, pressure builds up inside the plastic bottle, until the gas bubbles (thanks to the detergent) out of the 'volcano'.
  4. Adding a bit of food coloring will result in red-orange lava! Orange seems to work the best. Add some red, yellow, and even purple, for a bright display.