COMMENTS

  1. Egg and Soda Science Fair Experiment: Tooth Decay Project

    A cracked shell on your hard-boiled egg will alter the outcome of the experiment. Help your child fill each of the plastic cups whereby one has water, another has diet soda, and the third contains regular soda. Once the eggs have boiled have your child put one in each plastic cup then leave them overnight. Check on the eggs the following day.

  2. Egg and Soda Dental Experiments

    Learn how soda can damage your teeth by soaking hard-boiled eggs overnight and comparing them with water. This simple science activity helps kids understand the importance of brushing and flossing their teeth.

  3. Egg in Soda Experiment

    Learn how to do a fun science activity with eggs and soda to show how sugar can stain teeth. Find out the materials, steps and worksheet for this classroom activity.

  4. Will Immersing an Egg in Soda for 24 Hours Dissolve Its Shell?

    A video captures an experiment in which immersing an egg in soda for 24 hours dissolved its shell and turned the egg into a rubbery, squeezable substance. In May 2019, a video showing the bizarre ...

  5. Science Projects on Soda & Teeth

    By Susan Braun. Teeth and soda make an excellent combination for science projects. Students can learn practical and helpful information through science experiments using teeth (or eggs as tooth substitutes) and soda pop. From staining to erosion of enamel to a comparison of ingredients in various carbonated drinks, students can choose from a ...

  6. Egg and Soda

    2. Place raw egg into the glass. 3. Soak the egg in the glass filled with cola for 1 hour. 4. Check on the egg every 15 minutes, have the children write down any observations they have about the egg. Have them include as many details as possible. 5. After 1 hour, remove the egg from the soda.

  7. Tooth Decay: An 'Eggciting' Science Experiment for Kids

    Bring the water to boil over high heat, once boiling cover the eggs, and remove them for heat and let them sit for eight to ten minutes. Drain the water, and allow the eggs to cool. Place each egg in a clear cup. Add each selected liquid to the cups individually and ensure the liquid covers the eggs. Let the eggs sit for 2-3 days.

  8. The Tooth Enamel Egg-speriment [VIDEO]

    In this egg-speriment, we use eggs and a variety of beverages - both sugary and acidic - to show their impact on oral health. The beverages affect the eggshells just like they affect our teeth. Check out how the drinks we consume every day are changing and coloring our tooth enamel! From coffee and sports drinks to soda and juice, the damage ...

  9. Eggcelent

    The cola egg should become covered in small bubbles, while there should be no reaction on the fluoride egg. Lesson Learned: The acids in the cola have weakened the eggshell, making it more vulnerable to the acid in the vinegar. The bubbles on the shell are caused by air escaping the egg through the thinner, weaker shell.

  10. PDF The Dissolving Egg Experiment

    experiment. • The egg was removed using the ladle and placed on its observation plate. The egg was approximately, if not exactly, the same size upon measurement. • Unlike the vinegar egg, this soda egg was still very hard. The shell was intact. It was slightly discolored though and appeared to be changing in color to a dark shade at various

  11. What We Learned From a Tooth Decay Experiment With Eggshells

    Hard-boil two eggs, as in experiment 1, and let them cool. Cover both eggs with the fluoride gel or toothpaste. Let this soak in for at least 24 hours. After 24 hours, take the eggs out, gently wash off any remaining gel, and place both eggs in their own cups. (Again, one should have soda/vinegar, and one should have water.

  12. Tooth Decay Experiment: Teach Kids the Importance of Brushing their Teeth

    Put the eggs in each cup. My son putting the eggs in the cup. Pour the liquids in each labeled cup. Pouring the dark soda in the cup. Let the eggs sit in the cups for 24 hours. Our eggs are sitting overnight on the kitchen counter. The next day take the eggs out of the cups and see what happened. The egg in the water stayed the same.

  13. Exciting Egg Experiments to Try at Home or School

    Learn how toothpaste protects your teeth from soda pop acid by doing this fun and easy egg experiment. Compare eggs in soda pop with and without toothpaste and see the difference in color and texture.

  14. PDF Delta Dental's Egg-Citing Experiment

    The hard shell protects the soft egg on the inside, just like enamel protects teeth! Fill one plastic cup with dark soda pop and one plastic cup with milk or water. Now you will observe what happens when you place one egg in the cup of soda pop and one in the milk/water. Place one egg in each cup and let them sit overnight.

  15. PDF At Home Science Experiments Tooth Decay Egg Experiment

    1. Label each cup with the liquid and carefully add a hard-boiled egg to each cup. Optional: include cup and put some tooth paste on a small area or whole egg before soaking. 2. Pour 1 cup of each type of drink into its own cup. Make sure to include one cup with water (control). Soak for 48 hours at room temperature or refrigerator.

  16. PDF Winning Experiment Procedures from the NIH LAB Challenge

    The goal of this experiment is to compare immediate and long-range effects of personal health choices on dental hygiene. Eggs share similar qualities with human teeth, which makes them a good model for this experiment. The texture of the tooth enamel and the egg shell are similar; both are calcium-rich and have a protective function.

  17. Naked Egg: Biology & Chemistry Science Activity

    Add vinegar to cover the eggs (see photo below), and cover the container. Allow the eggs to sit for 24 to 48 hours at room temperature. Note: Changing out the vinegar halfway through and replacing it with fresh vinegar will speed up the process. The eggshells will leave residue in the vinegar bath (see photo below).

  18. Soda and Egg Dental Health Experiment

    Our experiment is simple. Take a hard boiled egg and immerse it in Pepsi or Coke for 24 hours and analyze your result. Well, look at that! The obvious conclusion for the 5 year olds is that you need to brush your teeth. They take toothbrushes and scrub all the color off the egg to mimic brushing their teeth.

  19. Easy Experiment for Kids at Home

    Method: Place one of the hard-boiled eggs in a cup full of water. Place the second hard boiled egg in a cup of soft drink, and the last egg in a cup of fruit juice. (Optional: You can also add a 4th hard-boiled egg to a cup of sports drink) Leave these overnight and return to see the results. At the end of the experiment, your eggs may look ...

  20. Teaching Preschoolers Dental Health

    Fun activities to teach preschoolers dental health. 1. The Egg and Soda Experiment. This experiment teaches and shows kids how drinking dark soda will make your teeth turn brown. The only way to get them white again is to brush your teeth or event better not drink dark soda in the first place. The egg represents your enamel.

  21. Egg and soda experiment. Oral health video

    This video seeks to show the importance of brushing your teeth.With the help of an egg and soda, you can see the damage that the acids in some beverages and ...

  22. Egg Experiment with Vinegar and Two Cool Twists

    Cover the eggs and set them aside for 24 hours. We gently stirred the soda and fluoride egg a few times during the 24 hours to make sure all sides were getting soaked with the rinse and the soda. Yes, soda and fluoride are our two variations on the traditional egg experiment with vinegar. 🙂.

  23. Egg and Toothpaste Experiment (Learn Importance of Brushing Your Teeth)

    Your eggs are ready to go on to the experiment table. Step-3: Cover the eggs with Toothpaste. Ask your child to coat two plain eggs with good amount of toothpaste evenly. And the rest two eggs remain as it is. That means we are not coating these eggs with any other material. Step-4: Arrange the Glasses for Experiment.