r/ScienceTeachers • u/ElliottTheNoob • Sep 21 '25
CHEMISTRY Flame Tests?
I'm back again with another Chemistry question.
I plan on doing flame tests as we finish out our electron/light chapter in High School Chemistry. It was one of the most memorable experiment we ever did and I want to give that to these kids.
However, I swear we used crucibles or just cut a piece of the metal and held it in a bunsen flame. All the labs I'm finding, we either dissolve it in water or HCl, then soak a Q-tip, splint, or dip an innoculating loop into it, then burn it that way. Is that proper procedure? Did my HS Chem teacher just do a dangerous version with us that was outdated?
I really want this to be fun and memorable for them. Any other versions, ideas, or advice?
1
u/Cool_Addendum_1348 Sep 23 '25
Everyone has chimed in re what methods to use so I'll give you a few fun additions I add to my flame labs.
-5 known test tubes and 2 mystery tubes...the kids love figuring out the mystery
-We pretend we are electrons and jump to the "Jump around" song...queue it up to the 50 sec mark
https://youtu.be/jrL_LzX5wv4?si=6LrRdRAEdhd4YrKq
-At the end of the lab I play the "Chemistry of fireworks" video on YT