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Welcome to ilovebacteria.com formally known as Ratlab.co.uk!
Pennies all tarnished and need cleaning up? Tired of that boring copper color? Try these experiments to sort out all your copper coins and learn about acids and oxidation.

Ingredients

  • Old 1p or 2p pieces which are getting a bit grimy
  • Lemon juice
  • Coke
  • Vinegar
  • Ketchup
  • Water
  • Salt and vinegar mixture

Recipe

Put you copper coins on paper towels soaked in the different liquids overnight and look at their appearance the following day. Leave them for a few days and record the changes. You can also drop them into the liquid itself.

Also try adding a nail to a glass containing a penny being soaked in vinegar and salt and see what happens.

What has happened to the coins? Are they all the same color?

Can you explain any differences?

 

 


Pennies are made from zinc and coated with a layer of copper. Copper can react with the air to form copper oxide and this is the dark tarnish you see on old pennies. Acidic liquids like coke and lemon juice can remove the copper oxide to give bright shiny colored pennies - the acid acts to strip off the top layer of the pennies and in time it could strip off the entire layer of copper to show the silver zinc underneath.

Coke contains phosphoric and carbonic acid, fruit juices contain citric acid. When pennies are soaked in vinegar they go green because they become coated with a layer of copper acetate, produced by the reaction between the copper and the acetic acid in vinegar. This is a similar effect to that seen on the Statue of Liberty, which, when brought over from France, was a dark copper color but has turned green over the years. This green layer is known as Patina, or copper carbonate. This layer protects the copper from further corrosion.

Adding salt to the vinegar increases the ionic strength of the weak acetic acid solution and speeds up the removal of the copper oxide tarnish on the pennies. This is why ketchup is so good at removing this darkened layer- it contains a huge amount of salt. If you measure the pH of ketchup you will see that its not very acidic compared with some of the other liquids you looked at. In the vinegar and salt solution the pennies should turn a blue-green color because of the deposition of copper acetate (from the acetic acid) and copper chloride (from the salt).

Note - This coating on pennies is not dirt - the coins probably have a lot of horrible stuff lurking on them that could be classed as dirt, but copper oxide is not! The reason that people do not use these substances to clean their dishes is that they are no good at cleaning stuff. If you look at the experiments on pH you will see that most cleaning agents are in fact alkali, not acidic, and this is because alkalis are much better at cleaning.

When you add an iron nail to the solution containing vinegar (acetic acid) and salt along with the penny, the nail will be coated in a thin layer of copper. This experiment would work much better if you used copper wire instead of the penny as there isn't much copper on a penny and the zinc can get in the way too.

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Licence.