This is for a game I'm making about chemical's reactions.
I need chemical combination and their reactions to being combined;
1. Please tell me the name of the chemical (or liquid like vinegar) and it's appearance.
2. The reactions must be able to be illustrate without the use of a model to experiment on (Ex: Explosion, Bad Ex: Makes subject dizzy)
3.The chemical name can't be really long.
4. There can only be two chemicals involved.
That's it! PS: I already have baking soda and vinegar
Last edited by samurai768 (2010-10-13 22:00:14)
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BUMP!!!!!!
This is supposed to be done before next wednesday!
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This site tells you combinations for chemicals.
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Try this one:
Fire+Gasoline=Explosion
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How about this one:
cabbage juice + ammonia
The reaction is a color change (turn green)
Alternatively, replace ammonia for vinegar, you get a different reaction color change (red).

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cheddargirl wrote:
How about this one:
cabbage juice + ammonia
The reaction is a color change (turn green)
Alternatively, replace ammonia for vinegar, you get a different reaction color change (red).
my little brother was doing this thing for school today. He put a piece of celery in dyed blue water and another one in red, and there leaves slowly changed color.
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militarydudes wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
How about this one:
cabbage juice + ammonia
The reaction is a color change (turn green)
Alternatively, replace ammonia for vinegar, you get a different reaction color change (red).my little brother was doing this thing for school today. He put a piece of celery in dyed blue water and another one in red, and there leaves slowly changed color.
I think you're thinking of a different experiment. The experiment I suggested is about pH indicator color change reactions (the cabbage juice acts acts as a pH indicator), the celery experiment is about water absorption in plants.

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cheddargirl wrote:
militarydudes wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
How about this one:
cabbage juice + ammonia
The reaction is a color change (turn green)
Alternatively, replace ammonia for vinegar, you get a different reaction color change (red).my little brother was doing this thing for school today. He put a piece of celery in dyed blue water and another one in red, and there leaves slowly changed color.
I think you're thinking of a different experiment. The experiment I suggested is about pH indicator color change reactions (the cabbage juice acts acts as a pH indicator), the celery experiment is about water absorption in plants.
yeah I confused that, but when I said "was doing this thing" I meant thing like "some thing or another" not "the thing you mentioned".
Last edited by militarydudes (2010-10-13 23:40:44)
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Suger super-saturated liquid+Sugar crystal=Bigger crystal
Saltwater+electricity=oxygen,chlorine (stinky green bubbles)
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cheddargirl wrote:
How about this one:
cabbage juice + ammonia
The reaction is a color change (turn green)
Alternatively, replace ammonia for vinegar, you get a different reaction color change (red).
Cool! Thanks cheddargirl, that really helped
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Ammonia and chlorine makes a deadly gas.
Antimony and arsenide makes...

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JeanTheFox wrote:
Ammonia and chlorine makes a deadly gas.
That goes so well with my signature

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JeanTheFox wrote:
Ammonia and chlorine makes a deadly gas.
Antimony and arsenide makes...
ANTIMONYARSENIDE WHERE ARE YOU?!?!?!?!?!??
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ihaveamac wrote:
This site tells you combinations for chemicals.
That's nice. I tryed google, but it wouldn't work. It was always more than two chemicals or a reaction I couldn't represent.
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Baking soda and vinegar FTW.
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samurai768 wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
How about this one:
cabbage juice + ammonia
The reaction is a color change (turn green)
Alternatively, replace ammonia for vinegar, you get a different reaction color change (red).Cool! Thanks cheddargirl, that really helped
![]()
No problem. If you need another one:
Starch + iodine
It's also another color change reaction (turns blue-ish black).

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cheddargirl wrote:
samurai768 wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
How about this one:
cabbage juice + ammonia
The reaction is a color change (turn green)
Alternatively, replace ammonia for vinegar, you get a different reaction color change (red).Cool! Thanks cheddargirl, that really helped
![]()
No problem. If you need another one:
Starch + iodine
It's also another color change reaction (turns blue-ish black).
Cool! Does cornstarch work? I think my science teacher has iodine in little bottle leftover from a science experiment; I wanna see the reaction
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samurai768 wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
samurai768 wrote:
Cool! Thanks cheddargirl, that really helped![]()
No problem. If you need another one:
Starch + iodine
It's also another color change reaction (turns blue-ish black).Cool! Does cornstarch work? I think my science teacher has iodine in little bottle leftover from a science experiment; I wanna see the reaction
![]()
Oh yes, it works. It will happen for anything containing starch.

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samurai768 wrote:
JeanTheFox wrote:
Ammonia and chlorine makes a deadly gas.
Antimony and arsenide makes...ANTIMONYARSENIDE WHERE ARE YOU?!?!?!?!?!??
WEEEEE MIIIIISSSS YOOOUUUUU!!!!!!!!!!!
[/PW]

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cheddargirl wrote:
samurai768 wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
No problem. If you need another one:
Starch + iodine
It's also another color change reaction (turns blue-ish black).Cool! Does cornstarch work? I think my science teacher has iodine in little bottle leftover from a science experiment; I wanna see the reaction
![]()
Oh yes, it works. It will happen for anything containing starch.
![]()
Woohoo!
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All of the non-boring chemical reactions I know are either deadly, or make some wierd substance. I made a list of things I made with my science kit in 7th grade. Good times...
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steppenwulf wrote:
All of the non-boring chemical reactions I know are either deadly, or make some wierd substance. I made a list of things I made with my science kit in 7th grade. Good times...
![]()
Hey, I'm in seventh grade
I wish I had a science kit...
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Mix sodium bicarbonate with acetic acid. The result is strangely similar to the vinegar and baking soda reaction... (Because it IS the vinegar and baking soda reaction with a fancier name.
But seriously, mix lead (II) nitrate (that's Pb(NO3)2) with potassium iodide (KI). A bright yellow cloud will form.
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