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MUST find recipes and do this chemistry demo myself! Watch this, watch this, watch this!

Seriously… Watch this, watch this, watch this…


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What you are watching is called The Briggs-Rauscher reaction, demoed by “the guy who literally wrote the book on chemistry demos: University of Wisconsin-Madison Chemistry Professor and 2012 ACS President Bassam Shakhashiri, author of the popular “Chemical Demonstrations” textbooks.”

Via Eric Lagally.

p.s. Here are the recipes:

– Solution A:
Add 43 g potassium iodate (KIO3) to ~800 mL distilled water. Stir in 4.5 mL sulfuric acid (H2SO4). Continue stirring until the potassium iodate is dissolved. Dilute to 1 L. 

– Solution B:
Add 15.6 g malonic acid (HOOCCH2COOH) and 3.4 g manganese sulfate monohydrate (MnSO4 . H2O) to ~800 mL distilled water. Add 4 g of vitex starch. Stir until dissolved. Dilute to 1 L. 

– Solution C:
Dilute 400 mL of 30% hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) to 1 L.

Procedure

Place the stirring bar into the large beaker.
Pour 300 mL each of solutions A and B into the beaker.
Turn on the stirring plate. Adjust the speed to produce a large vortex.
Add 300 mL of solution C into the beaker. Be sure to add solution C after mixing solutions A + B or else the demonstration will not work. Enjoy!

Notes

This demonstration evolves iodine. Wear safety goggles and gloves and perform the demonstration in a well-ventilated room, preferably under a ventilation hood. Use care when preparing the solutions, as the chemicals include strong irritants and oxidizing agents.

Clean Up

Neutralize the iodine by reducing it to iodide. Add ~10 g sodium thiosulfate to the mixture. Stir until the mixture becomes colorless. The reaction between iodine and thiosulfate is exothermic and the mixture may be hot. Once cool, the neutralized mixture may be washed down the drain with water.

From chemistry.about.com.

Environmental cut images in leaves, produced for environmental campaign.

From Plant for the Planet via thisiscolossal.

Human anatomical cross-sections made with paper. #beautiful

Art by Lisa Nilsson, via thisiscolossal, via Drawn.

Using 3D protein structures as inspiration for art and doodles. #verycool

This is so amazingly geeky! The below graphic is the crystal structure for Alzheimer’s disease related Amyloid Precursor Protein.

The image gained by means of X-ray diffraction contains eight chains of the APP copper binding domain. Four chains are used for the elephant picture.

Via its copper binding domain Amyloid Precursor Protein (APP) can modulate copper transport. Cu-binding presumably leads to a reduction of Aβ levels which is a key player in the onset of Alzheimer’s disease. Therefore copper could have therapeutic effects on Alzheimer’s patients.

More by Maja Klevanski.

Lovely heart graphic (with cool Princess Bride tie-in)

The Princess Bride illustrated by Amy McAdams and available at etsy.com. (via Hey Oscar Wilde!)