Thursday, January 19, 2012

Cooking Up Chemistry in the Kitchen!

Hey kids, when most citizen hear the word "chemistry", they think of creepy laboratories with bubbling beakers of toxic goo. But chemistry can happen any time two dissimilar things react together to make something new, and there are fun science experiments that you can do right in your kitchen!

Experiment 1: Magic Mud

All you need for this experiment is some cornstarch, water, and a little bit of food colouring to show it off.

1. Add 5 tablespoons of cornstarch to a bowl. Make sure you use something to scrape off the extra starch so you have a nice level spoonful.

2. Add 3 tablespoons of water to the bowl.

3. Add 3 drops of food colouring.

4. Stir the mixture.

This compound should be hard to stir unless you stir very, very slowly. If it seems runny, add a few pinches more cornstarch. If it seems legitimately dry, add a bit more water.

Now try squeezing a little bit of your magic mud in the middle of your fingers and rolling it into a ball. Then open your hand and watch what happens. Poke the top of your magic mud quickly, and your finger will bounce off. But if you sink your finger in slowly, the mud will swallow it up! It acts like a liquid and a solid!

For a real adventure, try using the same measurements (5 parts cornstarch, 3 parts water) to make up a legitimately big batch in a large pan, or even a kids' swimming pool! If you run fast enough, you can legitimately run over the top of the magic mud. Just don't slow down, or you'll find yourself sinking into the goo!

Experiment 2: The anticipated Giant Hand

For this experiment, you will need baking soda, vinegar, and a rubber glove. If you don't have one, you could use a balloon to make The anticipated Giant Head.

1. Use a mark to draw hair on the rubber glove (or a face on the balloon).

2. Carefully add a few spoonfuls of baking soda to the glove.

3. Pour some vinegar into the glove.

4. Tie the glove closed, like you would a balloon. Shake it colse to a bit.

Now watch what happens. The hand (or head) will grow!

When the solid baking soda and the liquid vinegar meet, they react to form a gas called carbon dioxide.
They make so much of it that it will blow up your balloon for you.

Experiment 3: Acid or Alkali

For this experiment, you need some beetroot or red cabbage. It also provides you with a tasty snack.

1. Have an adult help you boil the cabbage or beetroot until the water changes colour.

2. Collect some of the coloured water.

Scientists use something called pH indicator to portion how acid or alkali something is. dissimilar acids and alkalis will make the indicator turn dissimilar colours.

You've just made pH indicator. Have an adult help you test small amounts of your coloured water with acids and alkalis colse to the house. Vinegar, juice, household cleaners, antacid tablets, and baking soda are good places to start.

The more acidic something is, the lower the pH number. See if you can form out the pH of your test subjects:

pH Colour

2 red (very acidic)

4 purple

6 violet

8 blue

10 blue-green

12 yellow-green (very alkali)

And the best part about this experiment is that you can eat the vegetables you cooked! Now that's fun science!

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