What do you need to perform this experiment?
A clean 16 ounce plastic soda bottle
- 1/2 cup 20-volume hydrogen peroxide liquid (20-volume is a 6% solution, ask an adult to get this from a beauty supply store or hair salon)
- 1 Tablespoon (one packet) of dry yeast
- 3 Tablespoons of warm water
- Liquid dish washing soap
- Food coloring
- Small cup
- Safety goggles
What to do ?
NOTE: As you can see from the picture, foam will overflow from the
bottle, so be sure to do this experiment on a washable surface, or place the
bottle on a tray.
1. Hydrogen peroxide
can irritate skin and eyes, so put on those safety goggles and ask an adult to
carefully pour the hydrogen peroxide into the bottle.
3. Add about 1
tablespoon of liquid dish soap into the bottle and swish the bottle around a
bit to mix it.
4. In a separate small
cup, combine the warm water and the yeast together and mix for about 30
seconds.
5. Now the adventure
starts! Pour the yeast water mixture into the bottle (a funnel helps here) and
watch the foaminess begin!
How this works?
Foam is awesome! The foam you made is special because each tiny
foam bubble is filled with oxygen. The yeast acted as a catalyst (a helper) to
remove the oxygen from the hydrogen peroxide. Since it did this very fast, it
created lots and lots of bubbles. Did you notice the bottle got warm. Your
experiment created a reaction called an Exothermic
Reaction - that means it not only created foam, it created heat! The foam produced is just water,
soap, and oxygen so you can clean it up with a sponge and pour any extra liquid
left in the bottle down the drain.
This experiment is sometimes called "Elephant's
Toothpaste" because it looks like toothpaste coming out of a tube, but
don't get the foam in your mouth!
Question for you
1. Does the amount of yeast change the
amount of foam produced?
2. Does the experiment work as well if you
add the dry yeast without mixing it with water?
3. Does the size of the bottle affect the
amount of foam produced?
No comments:
Post a Comment