Naked Egg Experiment and Cleaning Hard Water Spots

by narhop in Teachers > K

1080 Views, 10 Favorites, 0 Comments

Naked Egg Experiment and Cleaning Hard Water Spots

2747220D-D877-4398-95D1-AFF3B5133087.jpeg
CE5FD32D-A3A9-439E-ABCA-DD82CE99485D.jpeg
1803A930-4430-43DF-AE22-AD6E586FE2DC.jpeg
C55DEE3A-B7F4-40D2-838D-313BC55FF59F.jpeg
My kids have recently started learning the dreaded chore of cleaning their bathroom. They use distilled white vinegar (4-5% acetic acid) because it is a versatile and effective cleaning product for them to practice with. Recently, when inspecting the completion of their work I noticed there wasn’t a strong vinegar smell. Come to find out, they refilled the Vinegar spray bottle with water when it got low. I tried to explain that vinegar has both antibacterial properties as well as the ability to break down hard water deposits. They insisted the water worked just as well.

We then set out to explore some of the properties of vinegar compared to water and some other cleaning products. One experiment was the effect of vinegar on hard water. Since hard water is largely negatively charged calcium ions we then conducted the naked egg experiment using vinegar, water and my preferred cleaning product (Mrs. Meyer’s) to see which one was most effective at dissolving the calcium carbonate egg shell. We had a hypothesis that whichever cleaning product dissolved the egg shell most quickly would also be the best of our products for treating the hard water spots in our bathrooms.

Supplies

Three equal size glass cups

3 eggs of similar size

White distilled vinegar

Mrs. Meyer’s cleaning (diluted 1/4 Mrs. meyers to1 gallon water)

Water


3 of our bathroom sink faucet aerators

Naked Egg Method

Place 1 1/2 cups of Meyer’s cleaning in glass 1
Place 1 1/2 cups of vinegar in glass 2.
Place 1 1/2 cups of water in glass 3.

Place an egg in each cup

Inspect at 4, 12, and 24 hrs.

Naked Egg Results

040EE163-1F91-45D9-8672-E22455774B8B.jpeg
092DA7B0-2023-4250-B0EC-C0B04BD7DDF4.jpeg
5F4F70FA-3861-4305-B39E-CB7462465A58.jpeg
C9120A08-8E1A-4942-AC6E-EC698F700813.jpeg
B5B8CADA-BF0B-472C-A5FB-D005CC84ACE8.jpeg
8B854AB5-FD46-41CF-914B-FCC78B29E0AB.jpeg
70D6E1A4-E694-4866-986D-0BAB0AA5D92C.jpeg
Immediately the egg in the vinegar had bubbles surrounding it while the other two remained unchanged.

4 hrs - egg in the vinegar was surrounded by bubbles and floating while the other two eggs were at the bottom of their glasses and appeared unchanged.

12 hrs - egg in vinegar appears to have a yellow streak. It is still surrounded by bubbles and floating. Other two eggs unchanged

24 hrs - The egg in vinegar is still floating and surrounded by bubbles. It completely lost its hard out shell and all that was left surrounding the egg was a transparent membrane. It is also larger than the other eggs now. The other two eggs look unchanged.

Naked Egg Conclusion and Science

666E0ACD-F688-473F-8AE8-5FC7B61AC8E3.jpeg
421AEDE7-A4C8-4293-9CC9-4506D9AF22A6.jpeg
42B8D6FD-EDA7-47DA-880B-798CC9DD5A44.jpeg
The vinegar was the most effective of our cleaning products at dissolving the calcium carbonate egg shell. Vinegar is a weak acid of 4-5% acetic acid in solution. When it comes in contact with the calcium carbonate it protonates the carbonate portion of the calcium carbonate creating carbonic acid and calcium acetate. The carbonic acid is unstable at room temperature and quickly breaks down to form carbon dioxide and water.

2 CH3(COOH) + CaCO3 => H2CO3 + Ca(CH3COO) => CO2 + H2O+ Ca(CH3COO)

Acetic acid (aq) + calcium carbonate (s) => water (l) + carbon dioxide (g) + calcium acetate (s)

The product calcium acetate is solid but is soluble in water. So the final products are the membrane enclosed egg and the aqueous solution of water and calcium acetate. The carbon dioxide gas eventually rises to the top of the solution and is released into the air.

Two observations to be explained. First, the egg in vinegar was surrounded by bubbles and floated. My kids surmised the egg floated because it was lighter while losing its hard shell. The bubbles were actually the CO2 (gas) which is less dense than liquid water. As a result the gaseous CO2 rises and pulls the egg upward with it. Once we removed the egg from the solution and cleaned it off we placed it back into the vinegar solution. Since the CO2 wasn’t surrounding the egg anymore it sunk to the bottom.

The second observation was that the final egg was somehow larger and heavier than the original. The explanation is that osmosis occurred across the membrane. At the start of the experiment the water inside the egg was less than the water outside the egg. Once the egg shell was dissolved the water outside the egg diffused across the membrane until equilibrium occurred. The water diffuses across the membrane from an area of high concentration to a lower concentration until they are in a flowing equal state (equilibrium).

Bathroom Fixture Calcium Build Up

E325FCA9-0B57-4152-BFD8-8982F2FEDB57.jpeg
F59E21E8-48D9-4B35-B053-99D8447F9D9F.jpeg
8F0E7965-E157-464A-B995-C82F319937AD.jpeg
456923E7-D28A-47EC-96A3-FC37B42E3601.jpeg
We then placed our bathroom faucet aerators with calcium build up in one of each cleaning solution. Our hypothesis was, the vinegar would be most effective at cleaning the hard water because it was most effective at dissolving the calcium carbonate egg shell.

We placed the aerators in equal amounts of the three solutions for 4 hrs. Right away we could see tiny gas bubbles from the aerator in the vinegar.

Both the water and Mrs. Meyer’s cleaning had no effect on the hard water build up. The vinegar had excellent results breaking up the white water deposits.

Our conclusion was that the vinegar was the most effective cleaning agent we had for hard water spots.

(M=Mrs. Meyer’s, V = vinegar, W = water)