Glow-in-the-Dark Baking Soda Volcano Challenge
โ ๏ธ Safety Warning
Perform on a tray to contain the mess. Vinegar can sting eyes โ avoid splashing.
All experiments require adult supervision.
Materials You'll Need
Gather these 7 items before starting
๐ก Tip: Check off items as you gather them to stay organized!
Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these 7 steps carefully
In this challenge, place the plastic bottle in the center of the tray.
Build a volcano shape around the bottle using clay or playdough, leaving the opening accessible.
Add 2 tablespoons of baking soda into the bottle.
Add a squirt of dish soap and a few drops of red food coloring.
When ready for the eruption, pour about half a cup of vinegar into the bottle.
Watch as the volcano erupts with red fizzy lava overflowing down the sides!
Repeat the experiment adding more baking soda for a bigger eruption.
โ Remember: Take your time with each step and ask an adult for help if needed!
The Science Behind It ๐ฌ
This classic experiment demonstrates an acid-base chemical reaction. Vinegar is an acid (acetic acid) and baking soda is a base (sodium bicarbonate). When they mix, they react to produce carbon dioxide gas, water, and sodium acetate. The carbon dioxide gas creates all those bubbles! The dish soap traps the gas in bubbles, making the eruption foamier and more dramatic. Real volcanoes erupt due to pressure from hot gases underground, but the fizzy reaction looks similar! Scientists around the world use this same principle in cutting-edge research and technology.