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Chemical Magic The ingredients are in your kitchen.
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Chemical Magic
Chemical Magic
Chemical Magic

Some of the earliest recorded "magic" was actually nothing more than a few simple science experiments using chemistry. Just imagine how amazed your friends would be if you could change crystal clear water into grape juice... and then into lemonade. Shhhh! Don't tell anyone that it's not really grape juice or lemonade. It's chemical magic and the ingredients are in your kitchen.

Materials

This experiment will teach you how to make your own indicator using cabbage juice. The materials are different depending on the method you select. If you want to make your own indicator, you'll need a few leaves of red cabbage, a blender, a strainer, plastic cups, water and some household chemicals described in each section. Or...

You can use a new product called Red Cabbage Jiffy Juice which is best described as a red cabbage concentrate that eliminates all of the mess and awful smell associated with making red cabbage indicator.

Easy Method: Red Cabbage Jiffy Juice

Just follow the directions on the Red Cabbage Jiffy Juice bottle to make a big pitcher of "indicator" solution.

Stinky Method: Make Your Own Cabbage Juice

1. Peel off six big cabbage leaves and put them in a blender filled half full with water. Liquify it!

2. Pour the purplish cabbage liquid through a strainer to filter out all of the big chunks of cabbage. Doesn't cabbage juice smell great?

3. Save the liquid for the experiments to follow.

Regardless of which method you used to make your "indicator" solution, try this...

Set out three glasses, side by side against a white piece of paper. Fill each glass half full with cabbage juice. Since you know that vinegar is an example of an acid, add a little vinegar to the first glass of cabbage juice. Stir with a spoon and notice the color change to red, which indicates that vinegar is classified as an acid. In the second glass add a teaspoon of washing soda or laundry detergent. Notice how the liquid turns green which indicates this chemical is a base. Keep these two glasses of red and green liquid for future reference.

Try adding your own "test" substances to a small amount of cabbage juice and note the color change to determine if something is an acid or a base.

How does it work?

Some substances are classified as either an acid or a base. Think of acids and bases as opposites - acids and bases are on opposite sides of a teeter-totter. Scientists can tell if a substance is an acid or a base by means of an indicator. An indicator is typically a chemical that changes color if it comes in contact with an acid or a base. This experiment will teach you how to make your own indicator using cabbage juice.

As you can see, the purple cabbage juice turns red when it is mixed with something acidic (an acid), or green when it mixes with something basic (a base). In the previous experiment, the vinegar was the acid and the laundry detergent was the base. Remember that an acid is the opposite of a base. Red cabbage juice is considered to be an indicator because it shows us something about the chemical composition of other substances. This is just one of many indicators that are available to scientists. Some indicators start out colorless and turn blue or pink, for example, when they mix with a base. There are hundreds of different types of indicators available to scientists depending on the type of substance that they are testing. If there is no color change at all, the substance that you are testing is probably neutral, just like water.

Use your cabbage juice indicator to test the acid or base properties of other common substances: Orange juice, lemonade, milk, salt, ammonia, or soap are some suggestions. You've heard about how acid rain is destroying the environment. Collect a sample of rain water and test its acidity using your cabbage indicator.

Additional Info

WARNING: Making your own red cabbage indicator is guaranteed to drive everyone out of your house because it stinks!

    Click the thumbnail below to see the video.

  • Chemical Magic
    September 13th, 2004

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