Video: A safer way to demonstrate the 'rainbow flame' in the classroom

A safer way to demonstrate the 'rainbow flame' in the classroom (video)
Credit: The American Chemical Society

A chemistry demonstration commonly known as the "rainbow flame" experiment has resulted in a number of serious injuries in classrooms in recent years. The experiment is meant to show how various metal salt solutions can create flames of different colors, but it can be unsafe if teachers use highly flammable solvents like methanol or ethanol in the procedure.

To prevent future injuries, the American Chemical Society (ACS) Committee on Safety recommends that rainbow flame experiments involving flammable solvents be discontinued immediately.

In this new video, Kim Duncan of the ACS Education Division demonstrates a much safer alternative a much safer alternative using the same metal salts dissolved in water (rather than in ethanol or ).

Watch it here:

More information: Chemical & Engineering News, the newsmagazine of the ACS, has also created an infographic guide for performing experiments or demonstrations involving flames or flammable, reactive, toxic, or corrosive chemicals. See it here: http://cenm.ag/labdemo.

Citation: Video: A safer way to demonstrate the 'rainbow flame' in the classroom (2015, November 11) retrieved 29 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2015-11-video-safer-rainbow-flame-classroom.html
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