Hydrogen peroxide decomposition using different catalysts

RSC Education Coordinators

Your shopping list might look strange, but this practical will be well worth it. Supporting student to understand reaction rates, catalysis, and enzymes.

This experiment should take 5 minutes.

Equipment

Apparatus

Chemicals

Health, safety and technical notes

Procedure

Before the demonstration

  1. Line up five 250 cm 3 measuring cylinders in a tray.
  2. Add 75 cm 3 of water to the 75 cm 3 of 100 volume hydrogen peroxide solution to make 150 cm 3 of 50 volume solution.

The demonstration

  1. Place about 1 cm 3 of washing up liquid into each of the measuring cylinders.
  2. To each one add the amount of catalyst specified above.
  3. Then add 25 cm 3 of 50 volume hydrogen peroxide solution to each cylinder. The addition of the catalyst to each cylinder should be done as nearly simultaneously as possible – using two assistants will help.
  4. Start timing.
  5. Foam will rise up the cylinders.
  6. Time how long each foam takes to rise to the top (or other marked point) of the cylinder.
  7. The foam from the first three cylinders will probably overflow considerably.
  8. Place a glowing spill in the foam; it will re-light, confirming that the gas produced is oxygen.

Notes

The lead dioxide will probably be fastest, followed by manganese dioxide and liver. Potato will be much slower and the iron oxide will barely produce any foam. This order could be affected by the surface areas of the powders.

Some students may believe that the catalysts – especially the oxides – are reactants because hydrogen peroxide is not noticeably decomposing at room temperature.

The teacher could point out the venting cap on the peroxide bottle as an indication of continuous slow decomposition.

Alternatively, s/he could heat a little hydrogen peroxide in a conical flask with a bung and delivery tube, collect the gas over water in a test-tube and test it with a glowing spill to confirm that it is oxygen.

This shows that no other reactant is needed to decompose hydrogen peroxide.

NB: Simply heating 50 volume hydrogen peroxide in a test-tube will not succeed in demonstrating that oxygen is produced. The steam produced will tend to put out a glowing spill. Collecting the gas over water has the effect of condensing the steam. It is also possible to ‘cheat’ by dusting a beaker with a tiny, almost imperceptible, amount of manganese dioxide prior to the demonstration and pouring hydrogen peroxide into it. Bubbles of oxygen will be formed in the beaker.

Theory

The reaction is :

This is catalysed by a variety of transition metal compounds and also by peroxidase enzymes found in many living things.

Extension

More resources

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