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Yeast-Air Balloons
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In this activity, learners make a yeast-air balloon to get a better idea of what yeast can do. Learners discover that the purpose of leaveners like yeast is to produce the gas that makes bread rise.

Soda Explosion
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This hands-on activity lets participant explore chemical reactions as they create a soda explosion with lots of bubbles. The bubbles in soda are made of carbon dioxide gas.

Dancing Spaghetti
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In this chemistry activity, learners use spaghetti to explore density and chemical reactions.

It's a Gas!
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In this simple activity, learners see the production of a gas, which visibly fills up a balloon placed over the neck of a bottle.

Exploring Materials: Graphene
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In this activity, learners investigate the properties of graphene and graphite.

Sublimation Bubbles
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"Sublimation Bubbles" allows learners to explore how some solid materials, such as dry ice, can phase change directly from their solid to gaseous form.

Breaking Up with Combustion
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This activity teaches combustion as the interaction of a fuel source and oxygen.

Gas Production: Blow up a balloon!
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In this classic reaction, learners baking soda and vinegar in a soda bottle to produce carbon dioxide (CO2) gas. This gas inflates a balloon.

Fizzy Fun
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In this activity, learners test what happens when they put baking power on different frozen liquids.

Erupting Fizz
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This is a highly visual demonstration that illustrates both the effects of density and chemical reactions.