Chemical reactions are part of our daily lives. From cooking in the kitchen, to driving a car, these reactions are commonplace. This list is aimed at some of the more exotic and amazing reactions that most of us have not seen or experienced. My knowledge of science is limited, so if I have made a blunder in my descriptions, please let me know so that I can correct them! Here are the top 10 amazing chemical reactions. Do not try these at home (but if you do – send us the video clips!)
Sodium is a highly combustible element and the addition of water can make it explode. In this video we see a drop of water added to a small piece of sodium in a flask filled with chlorine gas. The distinctive yellow color of the light emitted is due to sodium’s ‘D lines’ – this is often used in street lighting. This experiment produces a great deal of heat. When you combine sodium and chlorine, you get sodium chloride – common salt.
Magnesium ignites easily and burns very brightly. In this experiment, you see magnesium ignited in a shell of dry ice – frozen carbon dioxide. Magnesium is able to burn in carbon dioxide and nitrogen. Because of its brilliant light, it was used in early photographic flashes, and it is still used in marine flares and fireworks.
Potassium Chlorate is a compound containing potassium, chlorine and oxygen. It is often used as a disinfectant and in fireworks and explosives. When potassium chlorate is heated to melting point, any item added to it will cause a rapid disintegration in the form of an explosion (as we see in the video above). The gas coming off the potassium chlorate is oxygen. Because of this, it is often used in airplanes, space stations, and submarines as a source for oxygen. A fire on the space station Mir was attributed to this substance.
When a superconductor is cooled to below its transitional temperature, it becomes diamagnetic: this is when something is repulsed from a magnetic field rather than drawn in to it. This discovery by Meissner has lead to the concept of frictionless transportation, as an object could be “floated” along a track rather than “attached” to it by wheels.
Sodium acetate, when heated and cooled, becomes supersaturated in water. When it comes in contact with another object it re-crystalizes. This reaction also causes heat, and so this has a practical use in heat pads. Sodium acetate is also used as a preservative, and also gives salt and vinegar chips their distinctive taste. It is referred to in foods as E262 or sodium diacetate.
Superabsorbent polymers (also known as hydrogels) are able to absorb extremely large amounts of liquid relative to its own mass. For this reason, they are used in the commercial production of diapers, and incontinence garments, and other fields requiring protection from water or liquids such as underground cabling.
Sulfur Hexafluoride is a colorless, odorless, non-toxic and non-flammable gas. Because it is over 5 times denser than air, it is able to be poured in to open containers and light weight objects can float on it as if it were water. Another fun use for this harmless gas is through inhalation; when inhaled, it lowers the voice drastically – the exact opposite of helium. You can see that effect here:
The reason that your voice is lowered when you inhale sulfur hexafluoride is that the weight of the gas slows the sound waves produced in your vocal tract to just under half the speed of the sound. Helium works in the opposite way.
When helium is cooled cooled to -271c, it reaches the lambda point. At this stage (as a liquid) it is known as Helium II. Hellium II is a superfluid. When it flows through even capillaries of 10−7 to 10−8-m widths it has no measurable viscosity. In addition, it will creep up a container (as it seeks out a warmer area) seemingly against the effects of gravity. Just watch the clip above and be amazed!
Thermite is aluminum powder and a metal oxide which produces an aluminothermic reaction known as a thermite reaction. It is not explosive, but it can create short bursts of extremely high temperature. A thermite reaction is initiated with some type of detonator and it can burn at temperatures of thousands of degrees. In the clip above we see an attempt to “cool” the thermite reaction by dumping it in a vat of liquid nitrogen.
The Briggs-Rauscher reaction is known as an oscillating chemical reaction. According to Wikipedia: “the freshly prepared colorless solution slowly turns an amber color, suddenly changing to a very dark blue. This slowly fades to colorless and the process repeats, about ten times in the most popular formulation, before ending as a dark blue liquid smelling strongly of iodine.” The reason this occurs is that the first reaction causes certain chemicals to be released in to the liquid, which then, in turn, spark a second reaction, and the process repeats itself until exhausted.




















What happened to coke / mentos
apparently, someone goes to my school. In my chem1 and 2 classes, we did more than half of these. The superconductivity one is my fav
I have been studying advanced organic chemistry and have developed a liking for these reactions
1. The ferrous sulphate ring test: used for identification of aldehydes. The end point is where half the test tube is a. Brilliant turquoise color and the bottom is colorless separated by a thin orange ring. I’ll try nd put up a video if my professor allows it.
2. Concentrated sulphuric acid and water: its a known rule that one should always add sulphuric acid to water and not water to sulphuric acid. Reason is that when the first drop of water reacts with concentrated sulphuric acid it tries to dehydrate it very very Violently. DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME. Certainly not without protective clothing. I have a big burn mark on my right hand that probably won’t go away for the rest of my life due to concentrated sulphuric acid.
lol man this is good…
they say thermite and thermate melted the cores of the WTC
Sugar+ Sulfuric acid= A black solid carbon. (by product flamible hydro-oxcide.) Now this is cool
:D:D:D
Gummy bear is awsome and number four is magic !! wow
x
dude those were sweet wish we could have done some of that stuff in chemistry class then i would have definitively payed attention and probably gotten an “A”
I hate to be a party pooper but very few of the items in this list actually count as chemical reactions. Playing around with gaseous, liquid and solid states for instance, are no more than physical phenomena.
I’m ultra-diamagnetic. Everything is repulsed by me. X(
was the gummy bear ok???
Vermy, even changes in the state of matter are considered chemical reactions because it involves transitions in atomic structure, reorganization of the matter`s structure.
This is a great list, lads, cheers! I studied chemical engineering, and in the first year we had Inorganic Chemistry. In the lab, with a friend, we put previously melted Sodium into Chlorine atmosphere…well, that was quite a big badda bumm!
)
there where amazing i especially liked the 1 where the boat floats there it is amazing *thinks – i wonder what it would be like swimming in it?????*
You’d sink and drown
Oh and your cries for help would be hilariously low-pitched.
Except you wouldn’t call for help because you don’t notice hypoxia until its too late, you’d just collapse.
People would see your body in an apparently empty swiming pool, climb in to help, and get caught out in the same way.
HOW MANY HAVE TO DIE TO SATISFY YOUR CURIOSITY!!!!!
i am sue it was gummy bear cruelty!!!! it proberlly has a fammily and kids who have just had there daddy killed by some MEAN scientist who is a seriel murderer. there should be rspcgb (royal society of protection to cruelty of gummy bears) he should be but in prison and afer 35 years jail he should be killed in the electic chair
wow some great videos there. the floating tin foil box was like magic.
NICE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I would argue the Meissner effect and superfluid helium are both physical effects rather than chemical reaction. But great list anyhow =)
I THINK ITS ALL RUBBISH I HATE SCIENCE ME
everything in it is just so boring i HATE SCIECE
Wow to #1!!!!!!
itz so interesting. i luv science. its cool experiments r so interesting & learning
These vids are cool and all but you guys should try mixxing 90% peroxide with dawn dish soap and baking soda. its so cool. i call it elephant toothpaste but dont touch it its hot. 1 more thing… do it outside!
Francium in water. i didnt c any comments talking about it. its amazing!
this site helped alot thanx i am doing a scinec project and it involves chemical reactions
ur ALL GAY!!!!!!
Briggs-Rauscher Reaction: isn’t it a kind of Belousov-Zhabotinsky reaction?
soudium hexoflouride is awesome!!!!!!
they are all awesome
do the change colour with copper and fire trick or im gone
chemists have no problem ,because they have all solution.
I am understanding alot on this page with all the videos and texts i am coming up for a text on tuesday about chemicals and i am very nervous cause when i am older i am only 13 but when i am older i would love to be a hairdresser
lol
i lioke the reaction of vinigar and baking soda
i can’t understand what this is about
Amazing nature!!
Thermite is a wimp. You simply need more liquid nitrogen. Do the math.
Outstanding. One of the best lists ever.
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what are the solution of sodium acetate &water &heat which becomes a crystal when touch it
Gosh!!!
im running out of time for my big exam but your website wont show me anything much at all. And by the way this isnt a compliment
Numbers 7 and 4 aren’t really chemical reactions, but still cool to watch. Thanks!
There are only 5 of these that are chemical reactions.
Really it’s amazing
Cool
Super!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Name
weard
We dont have most of this elements in nigeria so experiment is limited
esoi esta dlvergaaaaaa
tanga niyo
very excited and amazing. school la eppadi seithathu ella.vere nice. chemistry is very fun.neanka sila vidajathi cleara sonna ennum nanraka irukum
awesome reaction yar……..
gud job…
sooooo cool!!!!!! i wannna do the thermite and liquid nigtrogen at school!!!! tho i dn tthink they’ll let us do that
quit succesful…………………………………..
NOT SO NICE
This could be this blogs best post around!!!
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very nice videos Top 10 Amazing Chemical Reactions i like it
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This is crap…
3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 are not chemical reactions, that’s my only complaint.