With the aid of the potassium iodide or baker’s yeast as catalysts to speed up the reaction, the oxygen enters the soap bubbles causing the substance to quickly expand out of its container and overflow like squished toothpaste all over the table. The hydrogen peroxide decomposes into water and oxygen. ![]() Hydrogen peroxide is mixed with some dish soap (and food colouring for effect) and then mixed with either potassium iodide or baker’s yeast mixed with warm water. ![]() The reaction is an example of a decomposition reaction. One such reaction that is a perennial favourite is the “Elephant Toothpaste” reaction, so called because the end product looks like a large tube of toothpaste being squeezed out of a bottle large enough to clean an elephant’s teeth. In order to help students see past the equations, we can carry out slightly scaled up chemical reactions in the classroom to bring them to life. Learning about the chemical formulas that represent chemical reactions although important, is no where near as exciting as seeing what these chemical reactions look like in real life. There are eight types of chemical reactions, four of which we focus on in grade 10 chemistry. ![]() Whether it is a cookie baking in the oven or a battery producing electricity, chemical reactions drive the world around us whether we notice them or not. Chemical reactions occur all the time around us.
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