In science, we did an experiment called the Elephant Toothpaste, the people in my group were Blake and Ranit. The experiment was pretty fun although at first, I wasn't sure if it's going to work but it worked.
Elephant’s Toothpaste
Stuff you need:
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Safety glasses
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A cylinder
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Rubber gloves
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A tote tray to protect the bench from damage
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120ml Hydrogen Peroxide 6%
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Dishwash liquid
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Dry yeast
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Food colouring
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Funnel
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Tablespoon
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Beaker
Safety glasses
A cylinder
Rubber gloves
A tote tray to protect the bench from damage
120ml Hydrogen Peroxide 6%
Dishwash liquid
Dry yeast
Food colouring
Funnel
Tablespoon
Beaker
Procedure/steps:
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Put on your gloves and goggles.
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Put a tote tray on the bench and put your cylinder in the tote tray, with the funnel in the top.
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Ask the teacher to pour the hydrogen peroxide into your cylinder (via the funnel).
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Add 10 drops of food colouring to the cylinder (via the funnel).
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Add a tablespoon of dishwashing liquid to the bottle (via the funnel).
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Swirl your cylinder around to mix everything together.
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In a beaker, mix a tablespoon of dry yeast with 3 tablespoons of warm water and stir for 30 seconds.
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Pour the yeast mixture into the cylinder (via the funnel).
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Stand back and watch the chemical reaction!
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Pour the mixture down the drain afterwards and wash out the cylinder.
Put on your gloves and goggles.
Put a tote tray on the bench and put your cylinder in the tote tray, with the funnel in the top.
Ask the teacher to pour the hydrogen peroxide into your cylinder (via the funnel).
Add 10 drops of food colouring to the cylinder (via the funnel).
Add a tablespoon of dishwashing liquid to the bottle (via the funnel).
Swirl your cylinder around to mix everything together.
In a beaker, mix a tablespoon of dry yeast with 3 tablespoons of warm water and stir for 30 seconds.
Pour the yeast mixture into the cylinder (via the funnel).
Stand back and watch the chemical reaction!
Pour the mixture down the drain afterwards and wash out the cylinder.
Scientific Explanation (How it works):
The yeast and water mixture acts as a catalyst - something that speeds up a chemical reaction in another substance while remaining unchanged itself. When you add this to the cylinder it makes the hydrogen peroxide break down into oxygen and water. The dishwashing liquid traps the oxygen in bubbles to create the foam. Just a small amount of hydrogen peroxide will create a lot of oxygen, so you get loads of bubbles - making your ‘toothpaste’ almost explode out of the cylinder.
Smell and texture: It smelled really weird and the texture was bubbly, you know when you wash dishes and there's like bubbles, that's how it looked like, it's because of the dishwashing liquid, it made bubbly and thick.
Extra for experts:
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Is your cylinder warm after the experiment? No
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Why? Probably because we added cold water and it made the cylinder cold.
Is your cylinder warm after the experiment? No
Why? Probably because we added cold water and it made the cylinder cold.
Hi Skyler you did well to post this in the short amount of time that we had. It would have been great if you'd told us why you were unsure if the experiment was going to work out, and also if you had included photos in your post. We will have more time to post tomorrow. Keep working hard.
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