Details
Activity Length
20 mins. plus 1 hour prep time.
Topics
Chemical Reactions
Activity Type
Demonstration
Language
English
PrintTest the pH of various substances in your kitchen, and be wowed by the amazing changing colours of cabbage juice!
“Chemical” is really just a fancy name for matter or stuff.
Chemicals are everywhere, they make up everything from the air around us to you yourself! A useful way to make sense of all of the chemicals around us is to find out whether they are acids, bases, or neutral.
Acids and bases are opposite like hot and cold;neutral means neither or in-between.
Acids create hydronium ions when in contact withwaterand have a sour taste. Lemon juice and vinegar are both acids. Basesrelease (or create)hydroxide ions in water and taste bitter. Many soaps and cleaning products are bases. When hydroxide ions and hydronum ions combine, they create water again which is neutral.
Cabbage juice contains a special molecule called anthocyanin ( an organic compound called a flavin), which gives red cabbage its colour. Anthocyanin is also found in blueberries, grapes and lots of other plants. When anthocyanin comes in contact with the hydronium ions in an acid it turns pink, and when it comes in contact with the hydroxide ions in a baseit turns blue orgreen.
We refer to cabbage juice as a pH indicator because it can tell us if a substance is acidic or basic by changing colour.Other pH indicators are litmus paper and phenolphthalein.
Vocabulary:
- Acid:Acids create H3O+ions when in contact withwater (for simplicity sometimes calledH+). The term comes from the Latin word acidus that means “sharp” or “sour”. Some properties of acids are that they taste sour, react with metal, change the colour of litmus paper from blue to red, and have a low pH (0 – 7). Examples of acids are vinegar and lemon juice.
- Base:A compound that produces OH-ions when in contact with water. Another word for base is alkali. Some basic properties of bases are that they can be used as household cleaners, turn red litmus paper blue, and have a high pH (7 – 14). Some examples of basesare ammonia and baking soda.
- Indicator:A substance that indicates the degree of acidity or alkalinity of a solution through characteristic colour changes.