Science project

Floating Paper Clip

Can you make a paperclip float? Will adding detergent to the water help you? Why or why not?

Materials

  • Tap water
  • Scissors
  • Paper towel
  • Paper clip
  • Cotton swab
  • Small bowl
  • Laundry or dish detergent (or both!)

Procedure

  1. Fill a small bowl ¾ of the way full with water.
  2. Use the scissors to cut a small square out of a paper towel.
  3. Place the paperclip in the center of the small square.
  4. Place the small paper towel square on the surface of the water. When doing this, try to lay the paper towel down as evenly as possible. If the center gets wet first, your paperclip may not float.
  5. Use a cotton swab to gently push the paper towel down into the water, away from the paperclip. What happens? Record your observations
  6. Repeat the experiment, but before adding your paper towel and paperclip, add ½ a teaspoon of laundry or dish detergent to the water and stir until it is well mixed. What happens? Record your observations.

Results

When there is no detergent in the water, you'll achieve a floating paper clip! When detergent is added, the paperclip may still float, but it is far less likely to do so.

Why?

The paperclip will float due to surface tension. Surface tension is the attraction of like particles to one another on a surface—in our case, a water-air surface. Water molecules on a surface experience cohesion, which is the sticking together of one molecule to another molecule of the same material. The paperclip is less likely to float in the water with detergent because the detergent acts as a surfactant—a material that reduces the surface tension of the liquid it is dissolved in.

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