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Home > 5.4b

Spinning Jet Stream

In this demo a ping pong ball with a hole along the seam is submerged in liquid nitrogen (-196⁰C) to fill it. When removed, the nitrogen in the ball boils and is forced out of the hole in a stream. The stream, which comes out at an angle, causes the ball to spin away from the stream. The “stream” that we see is condensed water vapor, not nitrogen gas.

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Condensation Cryogenics Newton's 3rd Law of Motion Vaporization

2.3c 5.4b CH.5d PH.5d PS.10b PS.7b

Pressure Cooker

Pressure Cooker

In this demonstration, warm water is placed in a plastic syringe, the syringe is sealed, and the plunger is pulled back causing the water to boil. The water boils because the action of pulling back the plunger increases the volume, thus decreasing the pressure. The boiling point of a liquid is dependent on the pressure of the system, so a decrease in pressure leads to a decrease in boiling point.

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Boyle's Law Physical Change Pressure Vaporization

2.3c 3.3c 5.4b 6.5b CH.5a CH.5b CH.5d K.5a PS.5a PS.7b

Liquid Nitrogen Ice Cream

Liquid Nitrogen Ice Cream

Liquid nitrogen is -196˚C and quickly freezes the ingredients into ice cream. The nitrogen boils out leaving deliciously creamy ice cream. The “fog” that we see is condensed water vapor though, not nitrogen gas.

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Condensation Cryogenics Freezing Mixtures Physical Change Problem Sets Vaporization

2.3c 3.3a 3.3c 5.4b 5.4e CH.2h CH.5d PS.2b PS.5a PS.7b

Shrink A Balloon

Shrink A Balloon

When a balloon is placed in liquid nitrogen the air inside it is condensed from the cold (-196°C), causing the balloon to shrink. Once the balloon is removed it will regain its size as the air heats up. Liquid nitrogen boils at room temperature. The “fog” that we see is condensed water vapor though, not nitrogen gas.

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Condensation Cryogenics Gas Laws Lesson Plans Physical Change Problem Sets Vaporization Videos

2.3c 3.3c 5.4b CH.5b CH.5d PS.5a PS.7b

Shatter a Flower

When a flower is dipped in liquid nitrogen (-196°C) it is instantly frozen. Liquid nitrogen boils at room temperature. The “fog” that we see is condensed water vapor though, not nitrogen gas.

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Condensation Cryogenics Physical Change Vaporization

2.3c 3.3c 5.4b CH.5d PS.5a PS.7b

Relight A Candle

Candle wax is flammable as a vapor, so a candle can be relit by igniting the smoke trail of a recently blown out candle, which contains wax vapor. This can be used to demonstrate how caution needs to be taken with flammable vapors.

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Combustion Light Safety Uses Household Items Vaporization

2.3c 5.4b CH.5d PS.7b

Mushroom Cloud

Mushroom Cloud

When dry ice is placed in warm water it sublimes very quickly forming a large amount of carbon dioxide gas. When a bubble is placed over this the bubble grows from the pressure.

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Cryogenics Mixtures Physical Change Pressure Sublimation Surface Tension Videos

2.3c 3.3a 3.3c 5.4b 5.4e CH.2h CH.5a CH.5d PS.2b PS.5a PS.7b

Dry Ice in Universal Indicator

Dry Ice in Universal Indicator

Universal indicator goes from red (pH 4) to violet (pH10) as the pH of a substance changes. Adding NaOH to water starts the solution off at pH 8-9 (blue). When dry ice is added to water it forms carbonic acid, and lowers the pH, which is the reason for the color changes. The “fog” that we see is condensed water vapor though, not carbon dioxide gas.

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Acids and Bases Chemical Change Color Change Condensation Cryogenics Indicators Physical Change Sublimation Videos

1.8b 2.3c 3.3c 5.4b 6.6d BIO.2a CH.4d CH.5d LS.11e PS.2b PS.5a PS.5b PS.7b

CO2 Bubbles

CO2 Bubbles

CO2 gas from subliming dry ice gets caught in a soapy solution creating a column of bubbles. When the bubbles are popped, the “fog” that we see is condensed water vapor, not carbon dioxide gas.

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Condensation Cryogenics Mixtures Physical Change Sublimation Videos

2.3c 3.3a 3.3c 5.4b 5.4e CH.2h CH.5d PS.2b PS.5a PS.7b

Camphor Particles

Camphor Particles

In this demo, camphor particles are placed in water. They sublime at room temperature which is why camphor’s odor permeates the room so quickly. The gas that forms around the particles propels the particles in random directions. Earwax contains a large percentage of long chain fatty acids which form a monolayer in water, thus ceasing the motion of the camphor particles.

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Monolayers Physical Change Sublimation

2.3c 3.3c 5.4b CH.5d PS.5a PS.7b

Chemistry Demonstrations

(c) Chemistry Demonstrations 2019
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