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Q&A for How to Blow up a Balloon With Baking Soda and Vinegar
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QuestionWhat happens if I change the bottle size?Community AnswerIf you reduce the bottle size (volume) without changing the amount of soda and vinegar, then the balloon will blow faster and bigger.
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QuestionDoes it matter how much baking soda I put in the bottle?Community AnswerYes, because if you put too much it will pop and if you put too little, it will not inflate.
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QuestionIf the balloon is thick and difficult to blow up, will this still work?Community AnswerYes, it should still work correctly.
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QuestionWhy did the balloon stop blowing up?Community AnswerThe forward reaction between the two reactants stops, and the reaction reaches equilibrium. Thus, no more CO2, or H2O is produced to inflate the balloon more.
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QuestionDoes the size of the bottle affect the balloon inflation?Community AnswerNo, it will not affect the balloon inflation.
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QuestionHow can I do it in a school project?Community AnswerJust get the baking soda and white vinegar. It is a very simple experiment. Record the balloon when the mixture of baking soda and vinegar inflates.
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QuestionWhy should I not do it with glitter or food coloring?Community AnswerBecause it is a science experiment and not an art project.
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QuestionWhat is the purpose of inflating a balloon using baking soda and vinegar?Community AnswerThe purpose is to see what happens when carbon dioxide is produced. It's a basic science experiment.
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QuestionDoes it still change your voice?Community AnswerNo, as baking soda and vinegar create carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas. Helium and sodium hexafluoride change your voice.
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QuestionDoes the balloon float after I do the experiment?Community AnswerNo.
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QuestionWhy does a balloon rise with baking soda and vinegar?Community AnswerThe balloon rises because mixed baking soda and vinegar makes a gas that makes the balloon float.
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QuestionDoes the amount of vinegar most affect the size of the balloon, or is it the bicarbonate?Community AnswerTechnically the amount of vinegar--but only because it is a liquid, and the more liquid that is in the bottle, the less air there can be; thus, the air must be pushed into the balloon (pressure!). Technically, though, it is a reaction between the acetic acid and sodium bicarb, so limiting one will limit the other.
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QuestionHow do I make a balloon that's filled with baking soda and vinegar float up?Community AnswerA balloon filled with baking soda and vinegar, or the gas from the reaction, cannot float up. The gas that is produced from the reaction is carbon dioxide, which is the same gas you exhale. For a balloon to float, it must be filled with helium.
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QuestionWhat are the dependent and independent variables in this experiment?Community AnswerThe dependent variable is the volume of the balloon. The independent variable is the time it takes for the balloon to inflate.
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QuestionHow does this happen?Community AnswerAcetic Acid (C2H3OOH) when put in water dissociates into H+ ions and acetate ions (C2H3O2-). When the baking soda is put in the water, it dissociates into sodium ions(Na+) and bicarbonate ions (HCO3-). The sodium and acetate ions would make sodium acetate, but that's still soluble in water so they stay dissolved. The H+ ions combine with the HCO3- to form carbonic acid (H2CO3) which is unstable, so it turns into carbon dioxide and water. The gas that inflates the balloon is the CO2.
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QuestionHow much baking soda and vinegar (in ml) should I use to create a balloon of 450 ml?Community AnswerI would do trial and error for this - as you create more CO2 gas, the pressure within the system increases, and the balloon expands to reduce this pressure. While you could do some stoichiometry to solve this, the unknown increase in pressure will hinder your results.
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QuestionWhat is carbon dioxide?Community AnswerA colorless, odorless gas produced by burning carbon and organic compounds and by respiration. It is naturally present in air (about 0.03 percent) and is absorbed by plants in photosynthesis.
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QuestionWill the balloon float up in the air?Community AnswerNo. The reaction of the vinegar and baking soda mixing does not create helium, therefore your balloon will sink.
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QuestionWill adding extra vinegar affect the amount of carbon dioxide produced?Community AnswerNo, it won't.
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QuestionWhat is the best type of balloon?Community AnswerLatex balloons are best because they are stretchy and thin so they can get really big.
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QuestionWhat will happen when I mix baking soda and vinegar together?Community AnswerIt will create a chemical reaction, which will release carbon dioxide and inflate the balloon.
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QuestionWhy doesn't the balloon pop when blowing it up with baking soda and vinegar?Community AnswerIt will pop if there is too much vinegar in the bottle. It won't inflate if there is too little. Just the right amount (it may vary with bottle size) should inflate it until the gas runs out.
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QuestionWhat is the control variable?Community AnswerThe control variable is the equipment and products used, as they stay the same throughout the experiment.
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