DAY 9 CHEMISTRY SUMMER SCIENCE INSTITUTE CONSUMER CHEMISTRY Most of our students will not end up being chemists but they need to understand the chemistry principles that affect their everyday living and their health. They also need to know that “chemicals” are not bad guys but are part of all matter. What follows are some activities that use household products and employ science concepts and science process skills. Here is a cute Environmental Protection Agency web site that takes kids on a tour of the chemicals in their homes www.epa.gov/kidshometour/images/comm.jpg 1 DAY 9 CHEMISTRY SUMMER SCIENCE INSTITUTE DETERGENT ADDITIVES – BRIGHTER THAN WHITE Certain detergents and fabric softeners claim to make your clothes brighter and cleaner looking. Some of these products contain chemicals that are called “brighteners.” These chemical absorb invisible ultra-violet light and re-emit this light in a form that we can see, that is, as visible light. Some products also contain molecules that absorb yellow light so things look “whiter”. These materials are blue in color. 1. At this station, there are five samples of various detergents and fabric softeners that have been poured into petri dishes. There is also a lamp which emits invisible ultra-violet light. Examine each liquid and describe it in the data table below. Then place each petri dish under the UV lamp and describe what you see. Decide if the liquid contains optical brighteners. NOTE: Try this with various kinds of white paper. Name of Product Appearance in Room Light Appearance in UV Light Which products contain whiteners? Explain your choices. ____________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ Which products contain whiteners? Explain your choices. ____________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________ Are there any questions you would like to ask? 2 DAY 9 CHEMISTRY SUMMER SCIENCE INSTITUTE STOMACH ACID - WHICH RELIEF IS BEST? Now that you have studied acid and bases we can put that knowledge to good use. You know that stomach acid is HCl, hydrochloric acid. But, did you know that it has a concentration that can dissolve nails or tooth enamel? Luckily our stomachs have a mucus membrane lining that protects it. “Heartburn” occurs when acid backs up into the unprotected esophagus. Antacids are alkaline compounds that neutralize stomach acid. They are not so harsh that they affect the throat or stomach themselves. How can we determine the effectiveness of different antacids? We can determine their relative effectiveness by finding out how much synthetic stomach acid is consumed by a tablet of each brand. Since we are comparing single tablets (typical dosage) we don’t need to mass the tablet but it is better to analyze if crushed. What do you need to be careful of when getting the sample ready? Some antacid brands produce carbon dioxide gas when reacting with acid. This carbon dioxide will dissolve in water to form more acid so to ensure accurate results we use a technique called a back titration. We add more acid than the tablet can handle, heat the sample to get rid of any carbon dioxide and then determine how much acid is left over by adding another base until everything is neutral. antacid + left-over HCl excess HCl salt + NaOH salt + left-over HCl + water 1. Select an antacid brand that your group will use and take three tablets. Using a mortar and pestle, crush each one separately and completely the transfer the powder to a 250 mL Erlenmeyer flask. Put two of the flasks aside for now. 2. Using a beaker, fill a buret with a little bit of 0.1 M HCl and rinse it around the barrel and through the tip. Close the stopcock and fill the buret with HCl above the zero mark and let it run through the tip until the level sits on the zero line. Dispense the HCl into the first flask to the 50 mL mark. (Don’t go beyond the 50 mark since it is uncalibrated below this point.) 3 DAY 9 CHEMISTRY SUMMER SCIENCE INSTITUTE 3. Put the flask on the hot plate and bring it to a boil. When it boils, continue heating for two minutes. Carefully remove the flask with “hot hands” and let it cool. While it is cooling prepare the other two flasks in the same way. 4. Add 4-8 drops of bromothymol blue indicator to the flask. If the solution is blue, pipet an additional 10.0 mL of 0.1 M HCl into the solution and boil again. 5. Clean and fill a second buret with 0.1 M NaOH. While swirling, slowly add NaOH to the cooled flask until the color just changes from yellow to blue. Record the amount of NaOH in the data table and results. 6. Repeat the titration with the other two flasks. 7. Since the concentrations of the acid and base are the same we can determine how much acid was used by the tablet by subtracting the amount of NaOH used from the amount of HCl added to the tablet. Amount of HCl used by tablet = amount of HCl added to the tablet – amount of NaOH used 8. Compare your results with other groups to determine the best antacid Brand Tablet Amount of HCl (mL) Amount of NaOH (mL) 1 2 3 Average 4 Amount of HCl to neutralize tablet (mL) DAY 9 CHEMISTRY SUMMER SCIENCE INSTITUTE TO A WHITER SMILE: AN ANALYSIS OF TOOTHPASTE AND POLISH Toothpastes and polishes generally contain two major components. One component is a detergent that washes away materials that are water soluble or can be attracted to a detergent molecule. The second primary ingredient is an abrasive that scours away materials that adhere to teeth and cannot be removed by the detergent. Of course, most toothpastes also contain flavorings to make the mixture enticing and may have whiteners and brighteners. The following activity explores the relative amounts of these two ingredients in some commercial tooth cleaning products. Foam (Studs) Test 1. Put a dab (pea-size) of toothpaste on the edge of a straw. Carefully slide the straw down the side of a test tube so that no toothpaste touches the wall of the tube. At the bottom of the tube, turn the straw around so the toothpaste adheres to the wall. 2. Fill the test tube 1/3 of the volume with distilled water. 3. Cork the tube and shake 15 times. Immediately measure and record the height of the foam column in cm in the data table on the next page. 4. Repeat with 3-4 more samples being careful to shake with the same force each time. Why is it important to shake the same numbers of times with the same force? Stain Removal Test 1. With a grease pencil make lines 1 cm by 0.5 cm on the bottom or top of a plastic petri dish. Make as many marks as samples you are testing. 2. Place a dab of one of the pastes on a mark. With a gentle circular motion try to remove the stain. Rate the ease of removal based on time or number of circuits needed to lift the stain from the dish. Record your observation in the data table. 3. Repeat with 3-4 more samples applying the same pressure each time. 5 DAY 9 CHEMISTRY SUMMER SCIENCE INSTITUTE 6 DAY 9 CHEMISTRY SUMMER SCIENCE INSTITUTE Abrasive Test 1. Place pea size dab of each of your samples on the bottom or top of a plastic petri dish. Be careful to make the samples as close to the same size as possible. 2. With your index finger, rub each dab in a circular motion noting any grittiness as you do it. 3. Record the relative degree of grittiness in the data table. High grittiness means high abrasive power. You may have to do several different toothpaste samples before you can come up with an accurate “grittiness scale”. DATA TABLE Toothpaste Brand Foam Test (cm) Stain Removal Test (number of circles) Abrasive Test (relative grittiness) Questions 1. Which product(s) has the most detergent (studs)? _____________________________________________________________________ 2. Which is the most abrasive? _____________________________________________________________________ 3. Which is the best stain remover? _____________________________________________________________________ 4. Which would you use? Why? 7 DAY 9 CHEMISTRY SUMMER SCIENCE INSTITUTE _____________________________________________________________________ SUNSCREENS: HOW WELL DO THEY WORK? With the growing concern over skin exposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation, manufacturers have been formulating suntan products, face creams, and lip balms which contain a “sunscreen.” The sunscreen is a compound which absorbs UV radiation before it can be absorbed by your skin. Most sunscreens are derivatives of para-amino benzoic acid (PABA). A product that has a sun protection factor (SPF) value of 4 means that only 1/4th of the UV radiation striking your skin is absorbed by your skin. SPF #15 reduces UV exposure to 1/15th normal. Manufacturers will often explain SPF #15 (or 4) by saying that it means you can stay out in the sun 15 (or 4) times longer than without protection. The experiment that follows investigates the screening effect of various products by seeing how well they block light falling on UV light sensitive paper (like SunprintR or Solar GraphicR). PROCEDURE 1. Select 4-5 labeled suntan products of various SPF values and one unknown. Make sure that baby oil is one of your choices. Please use ALL oils or ALL lotions and two not mix the two consistencies. Obtain a microscope slide and wooden splint for each product. 2. Prepare each slide by putting 1 drop of product on the slide and spreading it EVENLY over the slide. Try to keep the amount of product the same on each slide. 3. Place the slides on a tray in order from lowest to highest SPF value. Take the tray with a sheet of protected (in an envelope) sun sensitive paper outside to a shady spot. 4. Working QUICKLY, remove the sun sensitive paper and place it blue side up on the tray. Line the slides up in order on the paper. 5. Carry the tray to sunny location and allow the paper to react. The blue will fade to white or very light blue within 2-5 minutes on exposed surfaces. Remove and place the paper in the envelope as soon as the reaction is complete. DEVELOP THE PAPER????? 6. Return to the lab and examine the sheet in an unlit area. Write the SPF # for each sample on the sheet. Note: The paper will continue to develop slowly in any diffuse sunlight and faster in fluorescent light so analyze it immediately. Keep it covered to preserve your results longer. 8 DAY 9 CHEMISTRY SUMMER SCIENCE INSTITUTE 7. Which product protects best? Explain your selection. ________________________________________________________________________ Which product(s) protects least? Justify your choice ______________________________ What is the approximate SPF # of your unknown? Options You can try this with sunglass lenses from broken glasses. 9 ______