Elephant's Toothpaste (slow motion) - Periodic Table of Videos

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Elephant's Toothpaste (slow motion) - Periodic Table of Videos
The Elephant toothpaste science experiment is a great demonstration to perform, so we're going to show you two ways to can perform it yourself. A child friendly version and a much more exciting reaction.
If you want to learn more then follow this link.
I should get a large amount of the ingredients for "elephant's toothpaste", at night go to the house of someone I don't like, sneak onto their lawn, mix and run back to the car and drive away fast.
Hydrogen Peroxide (H2O2) reacting with dish soap with Potassium Iodide as a catalyst.
It's a pretty fun experiment to do, if you do it right. (In the first gif the girl screwed it up.)
Oh, and this too, this one is fast.
Hydrogen peroxide is constantly breaking down into water and oxygen, though it isn't the most exciting reaction to watch. But add a little dish soap and a catalyst called potassium iodide, and suddenly you get the eruptive, awesomely messy reaction known as Elephant's Toothpaste