How Do I Create a Explosion Easy
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Why does the Bubble Bomb explode?
The bubbles in the Bubble Bomb are filled with carbon dioxide, a gas that forms when the vinegar (an acid) reacts with the baking soda (a base).
If you've ever made a cake or baked a loaf of quick bread (the kind that doesn't use yeast), you've already done some experimenting with the bubbles that come from an acid-base reaction. Most cakes and quick breads rise because of bubbles in their batter. Those bubbles, like the ones in your Bubble Bomb, are created by the chemical reaction of an acid and a base.
Take a look at a recipe for quick bread. If the recipe includes baking soda but no baking powder, it will probably also include an ingredient that's acidic-such as buttermilk, sour milk, or orange juice.
Quick-bread recipes may call for baking powder in addition to or instead of baking soda. Baking powder is made by combining baking soda with an acidic ingredient, such as tartaric acid or calcium acid phosphate. When you add water to baking powder, it will fizz as the acid and base interact. In fact, if you ever run out of baking powder, you can make your own by mixing two teaspoons cream of tartar (it provides the acid), one teaspoon of baking soda (it's the base), and a half-teaspoon of salt.
- Try using a different size of zipper-lock plastic bag. What do you think might happen? Do you think you'll need to use more baking soda, vinegar, and water to make the bag explode? Try it and see.
- In the original experiment, we asked you to use warm water. Try using cold water or hot water. Does changing the temperature change your results? How?
- The first time you tried this, you mixed the vinegar with water. Try doing the experiment again with just vinegar. How did this change your experiment?
- Instead of using paper towel, make your "time release packet" using a different kind of paper, like toilet paper, tissue paper or notebook paper. What happened?
Any baked goods that rise rely on carbon dioxide bubbles to get the job done. You can make these bubbles either by using yeast or by using the acid-base reaction like you did in the experiment.
Yeast is a one-celled fungus which converts sugar to carbon dioxide gas. Because this process takes a while, bakers use yeast in doughs that they leave alone for several hours.
Another method that cooks use to make something rise is a combination of baking soda and an acidic ingredient, like orange juice or buttermilk. This is the same kind of chemical reaction that took place in your bubble bomb.
Next time someone you know is baking, check the recipe to see if you can figure out what ingredients make the bubbles that make the cake or bread or cookies rise.
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| This and dozens of other cool activities are included in the Exploratorium's Science Explorer books, available for purchase from our online store. | |
| | Published by Owl Books, ISBN 0-B050-4536 & ISBN 0-8050-4537-6, |
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| © 1998 Exploratorium | |
Source: https://www.exploratorium.edu/science_explorer/bubblebomb.html
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