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Capillary Action Experiment

It's a trick, it's magic -- no! It's capillary action, the amazing, gravity-defying
scientific phenomenon that causes liquids to flow up. How does it work? Why does
it work? Wonder no more because with this simple and fun experiment, you'll see
capillary action with your own eyes. You, kid scientist extraordinaire, will test the
capillarity of several different straws, determing which kind of straw has the
strongest capillary action.

Problem:
Conduct a capillary action experiment. Does capillary action work best in narrow or
wide drinking straws?

Materials:
Water
Food coloring
Spoon
Glass
Notebook
Pencil
Regular drinking straw
Miniature drinking straw
Large drinking straw (e.g. milkshake straw, tapioca straw)

Procedure:
1. Fill your glass with water.
2. Add a few drops of dark food coloring.
3. Use your spoon to mix the food coloring and the water until the liquid is all one color. Still too light? Squeeze inas many drops of food
coloring as you like!
4. Set your three different sized straws beside the glass. Try peeking through each one. Which straw would you like to drink juice
with? What about if you were drinking a thick, goopy smoothie?
5. Think about what you know about capillary action. Which straw do you think will show the strongest capillary action? Write down
your guess, or hypothesis.
6. Use scissors to trim your three straws so they are all the same length
7. Practice holding all three straws in one hand. Make sure that they are each lined up the same.
8. Place all three straws in the water, but don’t let them touch the bottom of the glass
9. Count to thirty.
10. How far up did the water go in each straw? Write down your observations in the desk. Was your hypothesis correct?

Results
The water travels highest in the narrow straw. Some colored water should have made it up the regular straw, but barely any of the
liquid should have traveled up in the biggest straw.

Why?

Capillary action depends on dissimilar, or different, substances interacting with each other, one a liquid and the other a solid. In other
words, it could never happen between two puddles of water or two straws. When the water molecules hit the straw, the two different
substances adhere, or stick together. You can think of it in terms of attraction -- the water molecules are attracted to the inner plastic of
the straw.

The results of this experiment can be explained by what you now know about adhering, along with a new concept:cohesion. Cohesion
explains the way molecules of a single substance stick together. Water has very strong cohesion. The smallest straw obviously had the
smallest opening, allowing for more water cohesion. Imagine dipping your hands into a pool of water. When you lift your hands, some
of the water is still pooled in your palm -- as long as your fingers are pressed tightly together. This represents the small straw. Now
what would happen if you separated your fingers a bit? All the water would spill out. Even though water is highly cohesive, it can't stick
together in a big straw. That's why hardly any water adhered to the inner plastic.

Now you know that the size of the tube is important for capillary action, but what about the liquid tested? Try this same experiment
using corn oil, liquid soap and milk. Do you think you'll get the same results? Keep guessing different ways to test capillary action --
and don't forget to make a hypothesis with each new test. That's how scientists investigate the world, and now that's the way you can
too!
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