Cotton candy is a sweet treat that is often enjoyed at fairs, circuses, and baseball games. When a person first looks at cotton candy, it does not come to mind that there are tons of physical and chemical properties. Although physical properties are more evident than chemical properties, there are still many chemical properties, if not more.
This is approximately the amount of cotton candy used for each experiment performed. |
1. Blue in color
2. Malleable
3. Sticky
4. Solid state
5. dissolves in water
We began by putting water in a bowl, and taking the sample size of cotton candy. |
Next, we placed the cotton candy in the bowl, and it immediately dissolved. |
Chemical Properties:
1. Not flammable
2. Smells like sugar and tastes sweet
- Obviously, by smell, cotton candy smells sweet like sugar. We smelled the cotton candy, knowing that odor was a chemical property. It is a chemical property because it has the ability to react and change odor when two substances are mixed together.
- I tasted the cotton candy, and it had a sweet taste. Once again, from our knowledge of chemistry, we knew that sweet taste was a chemical property because it has the ability to undergo a chemical change with the silva and taste buds.
3. Cotton candy crystalizes when it is set on fire.
4. When the cotton candy is heated on a stove, it produces a change in color.
First, we began by putting the cotton candy in a pan and heating it over a stovetop. When we did that, it immediately started to bubble. |
After letting the cotton candy cook for about 5 minutes, it began turning a greenish brown color. The color change from blue to greenish brown indicates a chemical property. |
Once cooled, it then returns to a solid and the final solution looks like this. The middle is a dark brown, and the sides are green. |
- The new gas produced it carbon dioxide. We supported this through two different experiements, both dealing with the plastic bottle, water, yeast, and cotton candy. One deals with the plastic bottle and bag as shown directly below, and the other has to do with fire.
We began by mixing warm water with yeast and pouring it into a plastic water bottle. |
We then added in the cotton candy and attached a plastic bag on the top to trap any gas that may form. |
Over time, bubbles began to form above the liquid mixture. The plastic bag attached to the top inflated, which was filled with the gas, carbon dioxide. |
As our second experiment, I researched that carbon dioxide, which is in many fire extinguishers, has the ability to put out fire. To prove that the gas was carbon dioxide, we decided to light a match and put it near the bottle as carbon dioxide is being released. If the flame went out, then we could conclude it was carbon dioxide. To perform this experiment, we quickly took off the plastic bag, lit a match, and placed it just close enough to the rim of the bottle. This allowed the carbon dioxide to reach the match and put out the flame within seconds, proving that the gas is carbon dioxide.
Citations
- Research about carbon dioxide having the ability to put out a fire.
http://home.howstuffworks.com/home-improvement/household-safety/fire/fire-extinguisher2.htm
- Sugar, yeast, water, and carbon dioxide experiment:
http://tnst.randolphcollege.edu/newsciencerules/Subjects/Biology/Experiments/sugarYeast.htm