One aspect of
Home Education that I love is the free learning that can come from everyday
life.
Recently, the
boys and I were cleaning and I was doing the washing up. Whilst doing it
William asked with I had to use the washing up liquid and didn’t just rinse the
plate under warm water and scrubbed as hard as I could.
For a moment
I had to think. I knew the science behind it; Washing up liquid contains
detergent molecules. These molecules have a very specific structure with a
polar head group and a long hydrophobic (water-hating) tail. When you dissolve
the detergent in water, it assembles automatically to form a “supermolecule”.
The hydrophobic tails interact with one another and want to hide from the polar
water molecules. The charged head group, in contrast, wants to interact with
the polar water molecules.
However, I
realised that this would totally confuse the boys and wouldn’t explain what
happens.
Instead I
explained that the liquid helps separate the fat and oil from the water. Once
done it bonds between the two; one creating a “fat and oil” layer and the other
water.
Although the
boys understood this I felt that we needed to cover it within a science lesson!
With that in
mind I remember a simple but effective science experiment!
Resources
Baking Tray
Foil
Full Fat Milk
3 Different types of Food Colouring
Washing up Liquid
Method
We started by lining the baking tin
with foil. We did this so we could it was a clean and pure experiment against a
neutral and non-contaminated surface.
We then poured the full fat milk into
the tray. Ideally the experiment only works with full fat milk as we are aiming
to see a difference within the two liquids. That said, it may be possible with
semi-skimmed milk and certain types of food colouring. (However, we wanted to
see clearer and better results)
We then poured the different colours
into the tray. We limited it to a few drops per colour. What you then see is
the colouring sitting on top of the milk. The fat within the milk holds a
stronger bond together and the liquids hold above it.
We then added the washing up liquid
but only a few drops of it.
What you will see in the above picture
is the bursts of colours expanding out once the liquid was added.
With more washing up liquid added you
can see that the colours now swirl around and move to a marble effect. The dish
soap does not mix with the milk. Instead it floats on top and spreads over the
surface. As it spreads, it grabs the food colouring. Soap is a
"degreaser" so the molecules in it are attacking the fat in the milk,
causing motion which creates the swirling of the colours. Where the colours
meet, they combine and form new colours.
We then went off to discuss that liquids
like water and milk have a property known as surface tension, due to the
cohesive forces of the liquid's molecules. If you look closely at the edge of
the surface it appears to rise up the side of
the glass because the surface tension of the water is actually pulling the
water away from the glass inward toward the centre of the surface. Since milk
is mostly water, it has surface tension like water. Homogenized milk has gone
through a process where the fat is broken up into tiny pieces of fat called
globules and spread throughout the milk. When the food colouring was added to
the milk, the fat globules were steady and undisturbed. Food colouring is less
dense than milk, so it floats on the surface. When dish soap touches the
surface of the milk, things begin to move. Dish detergent weakens the milk's
bonds by attaching to its fat molecules. As the dish soap diffuses into the
solution it surrounds the fat globules in the milk.
We loved doing this and it was a clear
and visual experiment that showed what happens when fat is broken down with the use of washing up liquid..
What do you think? Would you try this?
A great experiment and the perfect way for William to explain this to you in simple terms. Well done him for coming up with it.
ReplyDeleteNat.x
I've got to the stage I visit Martyns blog just to read your comments 😂😂😂
Delete