Science Projects, Lesson Plans and Experiments

Experiment of the Week: Cabbage Indicator #217

This week's experiment is a very old classic, but it is still a very fun one. We will throw in a slightly new twist, to make it easier and a bit more dramatic. You will need:

a jar of pickled red cabbage from the grocery
vinegar
baking soda
a drinking glass

Traditionally, to do this experiment, you need a fresh, red cabbage. You grate up the cabbage and then use one of several methods to extract the juice from it. Instead, we will just open the jar of pickled red cabbage and drain the juice from that into a glass. You can save the cabbage to have with your supper. Be sure to at least try a taste, as many people like it. I know I do.

Pour some of the juice into a saucer. Now comes the fun part. Sprinkle just a tiny pinch of baking soda into the juice. Watch what happens. As soon as the white baking soda hits the red cabbage juice, you get green foam. If you put in much baking soda, you will get a lot
of green foam, so be ready to clean up your mess. Eventually, all of your red cabbage juice will turn green. It seems that our experiment is over, but it is not. Now it is time to get out the vinegar. Add a little vinegar to the green cabbage juice. What do you get? Pink foam! Again, there is the potential for lots of mess, so either be careful or have lots of paper towels ready.

Once your cabbage juice is red again, guess what comes next. More baking soda and more green foam. You can keep going back and forth, over and over. Why?

The coloring in the cabbage juice is an acid/base indicator. It is a chemical that changes color. When it is in an acid (such as vinegar), it turns red. When it is in a base (such as baking soda), it turns blue-green. There are many other chemicals that do this, and chemists
use them to measure how acid or basic a substance is. You can use it to find out which substances in your refrigerator are acids and which are bases. Divide your cabbage juice into two cups. Use a little vinegar and baking soda, so that the juice in one cup is red and the
other is green. Put one drop of each onto a plate. Add a drop of lemon juice to each. What happened? The red juice stayed red. The green juice turned red. That tells us that lemon juice is an acid. Try the same thing with some of the other things in the refrigerator. Just be sure to clean up your mess and be sure that no one eats your experiment.

All lessons are brought to you by The Teacher's Corner and Robert Krampf's Science Education Company.

Robert Krampf's Science Shows www.krampf.com
Get his Free Experiment of the Week e-mail by sending an e-mail to: krampf@aol.com

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