Resource: Acids and Bases: Making a Film Canister Rocket
Media Type:
QuickTime Video
Length: 3m 23s
Size: 4.8 MB
Supplemental Media Available:
Acids and Bases: Making a Film Canister Rocket (PDF Document)
Teachers' Domain, Acids and Bases: Making a Film Canister Rocket, published February 20, 2004, retrieved on ,
http://www.teachersdomain.org/resource/phy03.sci.phys.matter.zfilm/
- Background Essay
- Questions for Discussion
- Standards
When acidic and basic solutions are combined, the acid's positive hydrogen ions and the base's negative hydroxide ions react to form water and release heat energy. The remaining elements combine to form various other compounds, depending on the chemical makeup of the acid and base involved.
Some acid-base reactions produce carbon dioxide (CO2), a gas that is a potentially powerful propellant when under pressure. A vinegar-and-baking soda mixture is just one example that produces CO2. As the CO2 concentration builds up in a closed container, pressure inside that container increases.
In this ZOOM segment, the cast members add vinegar to baking soda, which has been wrapped in some toilet paper. The toilet paper slows the reaction somewhat, giving the cast members time to put the lid on the canister and set their "rocket" upright. The CO2 builds up inside the canister, and the gas eventually forces the canister and attached paper tube to separate from the lid, launching the rocket skyward.
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