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EXPERIMENTS WITH DRY ICESAFETY NOTE: |
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| Using a push pin, or a straight pin held in pliers, poke two holes into opposite sides of a film can, near the bottom. The holes should be off - center, like pinwheel rockets. Tie a loop in a length of thread. The loop should fit loosely over the cap of the film can, so that when you loop it over the cap, and snap the cap onto the can, you can hold the can by the remaining length of thread. Place a small piece of dry ice into the can. Then quickly add some warm water, and close the lid, with the thread attached. Lift the can by the thread, and watch what happens. |
Press a warm spoon firmly against a chunk of dry ice. The spoon will scream loudly as the heat of the spoon causes the dry ice to instantly turn to gas where the two make contact. The pressure of this gas pushes the spoon away from the dry ice, and without contact, the dry ice stops sublimating. The spoon falls back into contact again, and the cycle repeats. This all happens so quickly that the spoon vibrates, causing the singing sound you hear.
When you place dry ice into some warm or hot water, clouds of white fog are created. This white fog is not the CO2 gas, but rather it is condensed water vapor, mixed in with the invisible CO2. The extreme cold causes the water vapor to condense into clouds. The fog is heavy, being carried by the CO2, and will settle to the bottom of a container, and can be poured. You can produce enough ground - hugging fog to fill a medium sized room with a pound or so of dry ice. Do not allow anyone to lay down in this fog, or allow babies or pets into it, as CO2 gas does not support life. Dry ice fog allows low powered laser beams to be seen; see the laser experiments page for details.
Dry ice, being frozen CO2 gas, can be used to carbonate water to create sparkling water. Place some drinking water in a glass, and add some dry ice. Allow it to bubble. Water ice may form around the dry ice. If this happens you can either leave it alone, or break it up with a spoon to help the process along. When all of the dry ice is gone, taste the water that remains. It should taste slightly carbonated.
I haven't tried to see what happens when you do this in a closed
container, as I haven't yet determined what is a safe quantity
of dry ice to add, that will carbonate the water yet not burst
the container. See safety note above. So I would strongly caution you against doing this,
unless you take the proper safety precautions, such as providing
a secondary container ( a coffee can perhaps?) to catch any projected
pieces of plastic soda bottle. Also, cover your ears or use earplugs,
just in case the container bursts. Don't do the experiment
in a glass container! If you do this experiment, take careful
data, and email me the results.
I'd be interested in what you find out!
See our Dry Ice Experiment Feedback page! See our Fog Generator page.
Visit the Dry Ice Info pages. These pages are outside my website. They are an excellent resource for anyone interested in dry ice!
Add your own Dry Ice Experiment Ideas! Your comments and suggestions are greatly appreciated.
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COPYRIGHT © 2000 - 2004, Brian Wesley Rich
Updated 27 April 2004
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