Instead of using glue as a polymer (as in the slime recipes above), we're going to use PVA (polyvinyl alcohol). Most liquids are unconnected molecules bouncing around. Monomers (single molecules) flow very easily and don't clump together. When you link up monomers into longer segments, you form polymers (long chains of molecules).

Polymers don't flow very easily at all - they tend to get tangled up until you add the cross-linking agent, which buddies up the different segments of the molecule chains together into a climbing-rope design.

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Materials:

Here's what you do:


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By adding borax to the mix, you cross-link the long chains of molecules together into a fishnet, and the result is a gel we call slime. PVA is used make sponges, hoses, printing inks, and plastic bags.

You can add food coloring (or a bit of liquid Ivory dish soap to get a marbled appearance). You can also add a dollop of titanium dioxide sunscreen to your slime before cross-linking it to get a metallic sheen.

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Comments

4 Responses to “PVA”

  1. emilyannejon says:

    Do any stores or places like that (that you know of) sell PVA??

  2. I don’t recall green slime or sand being in one of our product kits. Are you sure it was from supercharged science?

  3. Heidi Boender says:

    Hello,

    A couple of years ago we had our experiments kit in the mail. We received a green package of sand in our slime kit. Which slim experiment is this used for?

    Thank you.