Oil Bubbles in water Science Experiment
Made for parents and teachers
Science Kits and more
[ Ссылка ]
Kids Fun Science Online Store
[ Ссылка ]
My Filming equipment:
Cell Phone Tripod 54 inch Travel Tripod with Bluetooth Remote - [ Ссылка ]
Blue Yeti USB Microphone - [ Ссылка ]
Green screen & lights - [ Ссылка ]
Apple iMac 21.5in 2.7GHz Core i5 8GB memory - [ Ссылка ]
iPhone 8 - [ Ссылка ]
iMovie for editing
UK Amazon
My Filming equipment:
Cell Phone Tripod 54 inch Remote - [ Ссылка ]
Blue Yeti USB Microphone - [ Ссылка ]
Green screen & lights - [ Ссылка ]
Apple iMac 21.5in 2.7GHz Core i5 8GB memory - [ Ссылка ]
iPhone 12 Pro - [ Ссылка ]
iMovie for editing
Set up
1) Fill a large jar about 3/4 full of water
2) Then add a cup of vegetable oil to the jar. Wait a couple seconds for the oil to separate from the water.
3) Optional add food coloring to the water.
The experiment
1) Add a tablespoon of salt to the jar.
2) Watch the Bubbles form at the bottom and float back to the top.
3) Add more salt and watch the oil bubbles
This is a fun & easy science experiment, kids can explore density and a little bit of chemistry as they make oil bubbles with just a few common household items.
Oil & water don’t mix because of their densities and the chemistry of oil and water molecules. Oil is LESS dense than water. Oil are made of non-polar molecules. Water is made of polar molecules that can interact with other polar molecules. Because oil & water are made of unlike molecules, they cannot interact with each other and stay separate. Even though oil and water are both liquids, they are what chemists call immiscible liquids. Which means they don't mix.
Salt is heavier than water, so when I added salt on top of the oil, it sinks to the bottom of the mixture, carrying some of the oil with it. In the water, the salt starts to dissolve. As it dissolves, the salt releases the oil, which floats back up to the top of the water. After the salt dissolves, you can add more salt and it will create more oil bubbles.
Try these other experiments with your Oil Bubbles
Try spreading the salt in a thin layer on top of the oil
Then pour it in one blob. Does that make it have bigger or smaller oil bubbles?
Try this experiment again using two jars, one warm water & one cold water. How does the different temperature waters affect the rate at which salt dissolves (which jar does the oil bubbles rise the fastest)?
Oil Bubbles in water Science Experiment
Теги
Oil Bubbles in water Science Experimentoil bubbles in waterOil Bubbles in wateroil bubblesOil Bubbles Science Experimentsalt volcanosalt volcano experimentoil bubble salt volcanoOIL BUBBLES IN WATERsalt volcano lava lamp experimentsalt volcano lava lampHow do salts interact with oils?Make a salt lava lampSalt doesn't dissolve in oilSolubility of salt and vegetable oil in waterMake a Salt Lava Lampsalt oil bubblessalt lava lamp