How to do it
Note: if you are looking for science fair or science project areas, this set of Web pages may help you with ideas for techniques you might use: read with a prepared mind! Also, see the projects page.
Cubist bubbles
What is the natural shape of a bubbles? To find out, you need some detergent or soap, a piece of soft florist's wire, a pair of pliers, and a dish.
Use the wire to make a cube with one or two wire handles (a bit like a Cubic frying pan!). Sink this in the soap solution, pull it out, and check the shape of the bubble formed. If you pass the cube through a simple ring carrying a flat film of soap, you can produce interesting effects. Adding glycerine to soap solution makes the bubbles last longer.
Then try the shape on the right, and any other interesting shapes that occur to you, and see what sorts of bubbles form.
This will help you understand
Spiral bubbles
Spiral bubbles? Not really, just spiral films, really, single-sided bubbles, if you like. You need a piece of thick copper wire, about 30 or 40 cm long, a cylinder about 2 cm in diameter, a pair of pliers, a piece of thinner copper wire, and some bubble solution. The photograph probably explains it more easily than words. Wind the thick copper wire tightly around the cylinder to make a sort of spring. Take the spring off the cylinder, and stretch the spring out until it is about 4 cm long. Trim off any rough bits of the wire, and then bend in each end so that it cuts across the centre of the cylindrical space, as shown in the photograph.
Wind the thin wire around one of these end pieces, and pull it through the centre of the stretched spring, before winding it around the other end. When you dip this into the bubble solution, a spiral bubble will be formed, joining the spiral to the central strand.
This will help you understand
Lifting with surface tension
You will need some copper wire in two thicknesses to make a shape like this, where the thin piece of wire is able to slide freely along the Y-shaped piece.
Put a small knob or twist on the end of each of the arms of the "Y", because you will be turning this gadget upside down to lower it into a soap solution, and then lifting it out.
Watch what happens to the slide when you do this.
This will help you understand
Cylindrical bubbles?
Cut two pieces of wire about 40 cm long, and bend them into two circles. Fit two diameter wires at right-angles to each circle, and then join the two "wheels" with a central shaft wire, so they are about 5 cm apart. (When I tried this, I found two wires, twisted around each other, gave far greater stability, and you need to either solder them or glue them with epoxy resin.) If this contraption is dipped in soap solution, a cylindrical bubble will be formed, bowing in around the middle. Experiment with different distances: when you have found the best layout for the soap solution you are using, soldering will make the whole arrangement much more stable.
This will help you understand
Rapid bubbles
You will need some dry ice and some warm soapy water. Dry ice is solid carbon dioxide, and it is very cold: so cold that it is dangerous to handle. Using tongs, take the dry ice and drop it into the water, and watch what happens.
This will help you understand
Bubbles and string
This simple pair of demonstrations will show an unusual side to bubbles. Make a loop of wire about 5 cm across, and add a handle to it, so you can dip the loop into soap solution. Then tie a piece of cotton so it divides the circle roughly in two, but so it remains a little bit slack. Use the illustration on the left as your model for this.
You can also make a section of the thread double, as you can see in the picture on the right.
When you take the first wire loop out of the soap solution, notice how the thread can move around freely in the soap film. Then burst the film on one side of the thread, and notice what happens next. See if you can work out what has caused this effect.
When you have dipped the second loop into the soap solution and pulled it out, burst the soap film between the two threads, and try to explain what you see.
This will help you understand
A bubblemix recipe
I got this from Justin McGuire on the ABC Science Teaching list:
A recipe for bubble mixture:
3 parts concentrated detergent (Morning Fresh or Dawn work well)
7 parts warm water
1 part sugar or glycerol (it helps the bubbles to last longer)
Mix the ingredients very thoroughly.
A few tips
Bubble mix keeps well in an airtight container. It works better if it is at least two weeks old. I once used a single 20L batch in science shows for over a year and it kept getting better.
Hard water isn't very good for bubble mixture.
Vinegar can help clean it up.
Don't let it soak into carpet.
This will help you join the Teaching Science list
|