Bursting Water Pipe
Water is a very unique liquid. Unlike almost every other substance in the world, water actually expands when it freezes. This is very cool because it allows people to walk and skate on frozen lakes while fish are swimming below the ice. But freezing water can also pose a few problems for homeowners and some job opportunities if you’re a plumber.
About Steve Spangler…
Steve Spangler is a celebrity teacher, science toy designer, speaker, author and an Emmy award-winning television personality. Spangler is probably best known for his Mentos and Diet Coke geyser experiment that went viral in. Spangler is the founder of www.SteveSpanglerScience.com, a Denver-based company specializing in the creation of science toys, classroom science demonstrations, teacher resources and home for Spangler’s popular science experiment archive and video collection. Spangler is a frequent guest on the Ellen DeGeneres Show and Denver 9 News where he takes classroom science experiments to the extreme. For teachers, parents or DIY Science ideas – check out other sources of learning:
Join the Science Club and check out other cool science experiments at – http://www.SteveSpanglerScience.com
Sign up to receive a FREE Experiment of the Week- http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/experiment-of-the-week
Attend a Spangler Hands-on Science Workshop for Teachers – http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/training
Watch Steve on Local and National Media Appearances on YouTube at: https://www.youtube.com/user/SpanglerScienceTV
Omg, he's standing on the left side. But it's not the same! Hes allways on the right!
Btw Steve, keep up the amazing expirements, your doing a great job!
I'm curious, What would happen if your poured the liquid nitrogen directly onto a bowl of water?
The freezing is literally a state change, where the H2O bonds to other H2O molecules. but the way it bonds leaves large spaces (I basically failed A-level Chemistry so I don't remember why). When frozen, bonds form between hydrogran atoms of one molecule and oxygen molecules of another atom. As a liquid, not many of these bonds exist (none exist as a gas). Heating does break the rest of these bonds, but only as water changes to steam, a gas.
So it's a state change, not a progressive thing
This is over simplified, but an easy way to understand why it expands is imagine each water molecule is a triangle. When it's water, the triangles aren't attached so they're able to fall and settle into a compact shape. However, when it freezes, imagine each of the triangle's points attach to another triangle's points, forming a shape like a Triforce (google it). The huge space in the middle of the triforce symbolizes where the expansion comes from.
Ahahaha ! Nice one
what do you mean?
What channel is your news show is it only available at the state your located?
I will make sure the pipes in my home never even come close to freezing! Great video….I will link to this video at Test Boost Inc to help students prepare for the SAT Subject Test in chemistry
SCIENCE!
2:02 ''amazing crack'' me: u mean the buttcrack or the actual druggie crack? lmao
You ever put a piece of metal in liquid nitrogen for a while then drop said metal on the floor? If you get the chance, see what happens. I call BS on this video for that reason.
Hydrogen bonds.
Is liquid nitrogen required for this? I have a few small pipes (5/8" OD steel) that I want to have broken that have that look.
If I did the same, except filled a the container with water and left outside (its -22 here) – would this work?