MEMPHIS JUNIOR SCIENCE ASSOCIATION
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      • Cleaning Pennies - Extended!
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Cleaning Pennies!

Key Concepts

Picture

Materials:
5 - 15        Pennies (try to find some rusty ones as well)
2                  Cups (preferably disposable)
Water
Lemon Juice


Activity Directions:
  1. Split your pennies into 2 groups.
    1. If you have an odd number of pennies, it’s fine for you to have one more penny in one group than the other.
  2. Pour one group of pennies into one cup, and the other group of pennies into the other cup. 
  3. Pour some water into one of the cups. Make sure that all of the pennies are submerged in the water.
  4. Pour some lemon juice into the other cup, making sure that all of the pennies are submerged in the lemon juice.
  5. Wait about 10 minutes.
  6. Take the pennies out of the cup filled with water. Have they changed at all?
  7. Then, take the pennies out of the cup filled with lemon juice (it’s fine to reach in and grab them). Wash these pennies with some water—have they changed? 

Discussion Questions & Science Explanations:
  1. What exactly makes the penny rusty?
    1. Pennies are made up of mostly zinc with a thin copper coating on the outside. This copper reacts with air to produce copper oxide, which coats the pennies and makes them dull. 
  2. When copper reacts with air, is that a chemical or physical reaction?
    1. A chemical reaction occurs when the molecular bonds of a substance change. Changing the physical properties of a substance, such as state of matter, isn’t a chemical reaction because the substance is still the same. Some common examples of each include: burning wood (chemical), cooking an egg (chemical), iron rusting (chemical), ice melting (physical), cutting paper(physical), mixing play-doh (physical). 
    2. A chemical reaction occurs because the copper and oxygen combine to form a different substance entirely, copper oxide.
  3. Why does lemon juice clean pennies?
    1. Lemon juice contains a compound called citric acid. 
    2. Citric acid chemically reacts with the copper oxide and can dissolve it, revealing copper underneath that has not been exposed to air. 
  4. What is an acid and what is pH?
    1. Substances with a pH less than 7 are acids, while substances with a pH greater than 7 are bases. 
    2. pH is a measurement of how strongly acidic or basic a substance is. Unlike the number line, which starts at 0, the pH scale starts at 7, and substances with a pH of 7 are neutral (not acids and not bases), like water. In fact, the further away a substance’s pH is away from 7, the stronger it is.
    3. For instance, the pH of milk is about 6.8. On the other hand, the pH of stomach acid is 2.5. Both of these substances would be acids; however, because 2.5 is much further away from 7 than 6.8, stomach acid is a much stronger acid.
    4. Lemon juice is a very strong acid. It has a pH of about 2.

Additional Experimentation:
  1. Try using a different liquid instead of lemon juice. Does it work just as well?
  2. Try varying the amount of lemon juice that you pour into the cup.

​


​Published 10.12.2020

Author: Alex Zhang

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  • Home
  • About Us
  • Memphis, TN
    • Science Storytime
    • Science After School
    • Y on the Fly
    • Senior Technology Education Program
    • K-5 Science Challenge
    • MS Science Challenge
    • Girls’ Science Discovery Day
    • Elementary Invitational
  • Museum Partnerships
    • Huntsville, AL
    • Jackson, MS >
      • Science Spectacular
      • Sensational Science
    • St. Louis, MO
    • Little Rock, AR
    • Lexington, KY
  • challenges
    • Little Rock Challenge
    • Huntsville Challenge
    • Memphis Elementary Challenge
    • Memphis Middle School Challenge
  • Calendar
  • Gallery
  • Science at Home
    • Science Projects >
      • Make Your Own Volcano!
      • Make Your Own Potato Clock!
      • Grow Your Own Sugar Crystal!!
      • Dye Your Own Flowers!
      • Dissolving Egg Shells!
      • Make a pH indicator!
      • Pepper and Soap Experiment!
      • Sundial!
      • Coke and Mentos!
      • Carbon Sugar Snake!
      • Extracting Iron from Cereal!​
      • Blowing up Balloons!
      • Leaf Transpiration!
      • Create a Density Column!
      • Make Your Own Compost!
      • Make Your Own Ice Cream!
      • Maka a Lava Lamp!
      • Skittles Science Experiment!
      • Walking Water!
      • Rolling a Can with Electricity!
      • Ice Tray Battery!
      • Imploding Can!
      • Steel Wool in Vinegar!
      • Invisible Ink!
      • Supercooling Water!
      • Picking Up Ice Cubes!
      • Polar Bear Blubber!
      • Fireworks in Water!
      • Cleaning Pennies!
      • Cleaning Pennies - Extended!
    • Astronomy >
      • Constellation Cups
      • Layers of the Earth!
      • Moon Phases Flipbook!
      • Layers of the Atmosphere!
      • Black Holes!
      • Gravity!
      • Eclipses!
      • Nebulae!
      • The Solar System
      • Clouds in a Jar!
      • Mars!
      • Telescopes!
      • Solar Oven!
      • Stars!
      • Comets!
      • Astronauts!
      • Polar Lights!
      • Venus!
    • Anatomy >
      • The Skeletal System
      • The Respiratory System
      • The Digestive System
      • The Circulatory System
      • The Endocrine System
      • The Nervous System
      • The Integumentary System
      • Lung Cancer
      • Lukemia
      • Lymphoma
      • Pancreatic Cancer
      • Renal Cancer
      • Bile Duct Cancer
      • Mitosis and The Cell Cycle