#4 Mixtures and Compounds

mixtures-and-compounds

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Today we will be identifying mixtures and compounds by looking at different substances and trying to figure out if the ingredients are chemically bonded together or not. My younger two children are using Christian Kids Explore Chemistry by Bright Ideas Press, and this is one of the fun experiments in the book.

You will want to take out 6 bowls and make 6 labels. 3 by 5 cards folded length-wise are perfect for the labels. You can write with a black marker the following mixtures and compounds:

  • mustard mixture
  • sand/salt mixture
  • sugar compound
  • salt compound
  • water compound
  • water/oil mixture

elementary-level-chemistryGo ahead and examine each of the mixtures and compounds to figure out why they are mixtures and compounds. The hardest one for my kids was the mustard. They thought it was a compound because it looked like one substance, but mustard is made up of different powdered ingredients (solids) and water. There is no chemical bond between the ingredients, which is why it is a mixture.

Sand and salt don’t chemically bond together when placed in a bowl, so that one was obviously a mixture. The sugar, salt, and water were obviously compounds because the elements combined chemically to produce a new substance.

oli-water-mixtureLast but not least was the water/oil mixture. We poured water and oil into a bowl, and they definitely didn’t combine into a new substance. In fact, they remained as separate as ever! We tinted the water blue to show how the water (blue) and the oil (light yellow) are not even wanting to mingle together. You can see in the video that something unexpected happened with this last mixture, which resembled fireworks!

 

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8 Responses to “#4 Mixtures and Compounds”

  1. Ticia says:

    Another friend of mine then had her daughter take a mixture and see if she could separate it out into its different components. Of course her components were a little easier to separate.

  2. Ticia says:

    PS: for some reason I have the hardest time pinning your posts. I can repin them fine, but for some reason it always has problems. No clue why.

    • Susan says:

      I sometimes have trouble pinning my own posts, but eventually it works. This whole series is under the “Elementary Science” board.

  3. Melissa says:

    This looks like a fun experiment! My kids are learning some basis chemistry right now. I’ll have to pass this along to my hubby.

  4. A says:

    Salt, sugar, and water together is a mixture. Dissolving is a physical change, not a chemical change.

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