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Instant Worms Now is your chance to create a bowl full of Insta-Worms!
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Instant Worms

Now is your chance to create a bowl full of Insta-Worms! Just add a little Worm Activator to some blue Worm Goo, stand back and watch the worms wriggle and squirm, along with your friends and family! Fishing, anyone? Oh, did anyone mention that this is an excellent way to learn a little chemistry at the same time? Awesome!

See the video

Materials

The project featured on television comes from a science kit called Insta-Worms . The "worm goo" is made from alginate - a polysaccharide isolated from seaweed - no kidding!
  1. Let's start by making the Worm Activator solution. Measure 1 cup of warm water into the bowl. Pour all of the Worm Activator powder into the water and stir with a spoon until most of the powder dissolves.
  2. Take off the cap to the Worm Goo solution and remove the seal. Replace the cap and you're ready to start making worm.
  3. Squirt a small stream of the Worm Goo into the Activator solution. Notice how the Worm Goo immediately turns into a long, stringy worm. Go ahead... you know you want to... touch it!
  4. Carefully pull the worm out of the Activator solution to see what you made. Don't worry if the worm breaks... just dip the gooey end back into the Activator solution to seal it up. Now that's science magic!

How does it work?

When you make Insta-Worms®, you're learning about the science of polymers. The creative scientists at Steve Spangler Science coined the name, Worm Goo, but the real name of this liquid is sodium alginate. Sodium alginate is a long chain of molecules called a polymer. Specifically, sodium alginate a polysaccharide isolated from seaweed. Polymers are large molecules made by linking many smaller molecules together. Polysaccharides, such as starch and alginate, are made by linking together hundreds of glucose (sugar) molecules. Alginate is commonly used as a thickener for foods such as ice cream and fruit pies. Now that you know this chemistry secret, take a look at food labels the next time you're at the grocery store to find out which other foods contain sodium alginate. Alginate compounds are also used for dental impression materials and wound dressings to name a few.

The sodium alginate (Worm Goo) immediately changes from a liquid to a solid the moment it touches the Worm Activator solution. The Worm Activator solution contains calcium which serves to link the long polymer chains together. Scientists call this "cross-linking." For the scientists in the audience, here's a more detailed description of what happens: a polymer strand is formed when the sodium alginate solution is added to a calcium chloride solution. This occurs because the Ca++ ions replace the Na+ ions and serve as a cross-linking agent to link two alginate chains together. The resulting cross-linked polymer is insoluble in calcium chloride solution and this results in the formation of the polymer strand. See, now you know!

    Click the thumbnail below to see the video.

  • Instant Worms
    November 15th, 2004

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