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Posted

the coating on the mentos encourages the carbon dioxide dissolved in the drink to be released at a high rate. the fact that fizzy drinks are acidic also produces more carbon dioxide when it reacts with the carbonates on the mentos.

 

EDIT: just done some research to check the mechanism. The carbon dioxide is in a super saturated solution as soon as you release the pressure. if left alone, the excess carbon dioxide will be released slowly and it will become flat. the surface of the mentos acts as a catalyst for the reaction CO2(aq) <-> CO2(g) since this situation is not at equlibrium, this results in the production of CO2(g) since this is catalysed, it goes fast.

Posted

Ask Bill Nie, the science guy. It has become one of his kitchen chemistry experiments.

 

what are his credentials anyway?

Posted

You don't need specifically mentos. Add a tablespoon full of sugar to fresh diet coke and you get the same result. You also get the same result when salt is added. Even when sand is added, you get a similar result but less strong.

 

This is a two-sided mechanism. Part of the mechanism is just by adding much more surface, on which bubbles can form, hence the effect of sand. Another part of the effect is that dissolved sugar and dissolved salt makes the CO2 less soluble (it is already over-saturated) and drives it out of solution.

Posted
You don't need specifically mentos. Add a tablespoon full of sugar to fresh diet coke and you get the same result. You also get the same result when salt is added. Even when sand is added' date=' you get a similar result but less strong.

 

This is a two-sided mechanism. Part of the mechanism is just by adding much more surface, on which bubbles can form, hence the effect of sand. Another part of the effect is that dissolved sugar and dissolved salt makes the CO2 less soluble (it is already over-saturated) and drives it out of solution.[/quote']

 

 

I've noticed that they tend to use diet. Is that a more violent reaction, as compared to regular soda that already has sugar in it, so there is less CO2 in the solution? (I've also noticed diet soda spontaneously fizzing on occasion, with no apparent catalyst, and wonder if it's related)

Posted

Cheers, i think ill try it with diet lemonade (less staining) and sugar, its always fun (im very childish sometimes)

Posted

I, for one, am getting sick of all the mentos+soda videos are out there. Talk abot overusing an idea.

 

Why can't people come up with original stuff?

Posted
I' date=' for one, am getting sick of all the mentos+soda videos are out there. Talk abot overusing an idea.

 

Why can't people come up with original stuff?[/quote']

 

Lol. I only found out about the whole thing last week. I tried it out on some Irn Bru (scottish drink) and it was pretty crap.

 

Me needs dry Ice :eek:

Posted
Lol. I only found out about the whole thing last week. I tried it out on some Irn Bru (scottish drink) and it was pretty crap.

 

Me needs dry Ice :eek:

 

yeah, this thing has been circulating the net's video sites for months, if not longer.

Posted

Ecoli, I fully agree with you. This thread is going in a k3wlish direction. I've been thinking of removing this, but I'll leave this as a warning to all serious chemists: This is no fun, it is not original and does not add anything.

 

THREAD CLOSED.

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