When I walk in the countryside, my eyes are constantly searching for anything of interest, stuff that invariably ends up in a Pocket Museum.
When I'm in town, I can't help myself and my eyes scour the pavement and pick up discarded/lost pennies......and I use them for science!
Try this with your kids...........it's easy to resource and always works.
February 12th. 1809
Clean up President Lincoln pennies for his
birthday!
Pennies
get dull over time because the copper in the pennies
slowly reacts with air to form copper oxide. Pure copper metal is bright and
shiny, but the oxide is dull and greenish. When you place the pennies in the
salt and vinegar solution, the acetic acid from the vinegar dissolves the
copper oxide, leaving behind shiny clean pennies.
You need:
·
Dirty Lincoln
pennies
- 1/4 cup white vinegar (dilute acetic
acid) and 1 teaspoon salt (NaCl)
- 1 shallow plastic bowl
- water and paper towels
This is what you do:
- Pour the salt and vinegar into the bowl and stir
until the salt dissolves.
- Dip a penny halfway into the liquid and hold it
there for 10-20 seconds. Remove the penny from the liquid. What do you
see?
- Place the rest of the pennies into the liquid.
- What happens?
- After 5 minutes, take half of the pennies out of the liquid and place them on a paper towel to dry.
- Remove the rest of the pennies and rinse them
well under the tap.
- Place
these pennies on a second paper towel to dry.
- Wait
an hour - then take a look at the pennies you have placed on the paper towels.
- What has happened?
v Rinsing the pennies with water stops the reaction
between the salt/vinegar and the pennies.
v They will slowly turn dull again over time, but not
quickly enough for you to watch!
v The salt/vinegar residue on the unrinsed pennies
promotes a reaction between the copper and the oxygen in the air.
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