| Purpose - |
This demo shows the
retarding effect of carbon dioxide on flames, and also shows the
density of carbon dioxide compared with air. |
A couple of candles
soon to be snuffed.
NaHCO3
+ CH3COOH =>
CO2 +H2O + NaCH3COO |
| Nature - |
Demonstration |
| Materials - |
Two candles of different
heights, a large see through bowl or a small aquarium 10 - 15 L,
250ml beaker, vinegar, baking soda |
| Method - |
- Place the baking soda into the
beaker, then put the beaker into the centre of the aquarium.
- Stand both the candles in the
aquarium and light them
- Pour the vinegar into the beaker
and note the reaction.
- After a while the short candle
should go out, later followed be the taller one.
|
| Safety - |
Simple caution with matches |
|
| Explanation - |
The reaction
between vinegar (an acid) and baking soda (a carbonate) creates
invisible carbon dioxide gas which is seen bubbling off. this
is denser than air so it fills the beaker, then spills over into
aquarium filling it also. A candle flame requires oxygen to
burn, so as the level of carbon dioxide in the aquarium reaches each
flame, it snuffs out. |
| Notes - |
If
you have difficulty getting enough gas to effectively snuff the
candles, try using a Petri dish instead of the beaker.
The
reaction between Baking soda and vinegar is given above. |
|