How Fireworks Get Their Colors - Science Friday (2024)

Grade Level

9 -10

minutes

15 min - 1 hr

subject

Physical Science

Activity Type:

atoms, chemicals, energy, fire, metal salts

Introduction

Have you ever watched a fireworks show and wondered how all the different colors – amazing reds, yellows, oranges, blues, purples, greens, and more – are made? The color, or colors, that a firework makes depends on what color-producing chemicals are in the firework. These chemicals are various metal salts that make different, specific colors as they are heated. In this science activity, you will get to burn some metal salts at home to investigate what colors they make. Then, at the next fireworks show, you can impress friends and family with your knowledge of what may be causing some of the colors they see!

How Fireworks Get Their Colors - Science Friday (1)

Materials

  • Chemicals to burn, specifically table salt and copper sulfate:
    • Table salt is technically called sodium chloride.
    • Copper sulfate is available through pet or aquarium stores to combat algae, or through home improvement stores as a root killer. Make sure the product is pure copper sulfate and that it is in powder or small crystals form.
    • Alternatively, if you would like these chemicals—plus two other colorful, hard-to-find metal salts, as well assome safety equipment,all in one convenient package—try the Rainbow Fire kit from the Science Buddies Store.
  • Small plastic bag
  • Bamboo skewers (at least 6)
  • White glue
  • Candle
  • Matches or lighter
  • Container of water
  • An outdoor surface you can safely burn a candle on when it is dark outside (or twilight). Be sure it is in an open area to allow good air flow.
  • Adult helper
  • Recommended: Disposable gloves.Dishwashing gloves are a fine alternative.These are for handling the copper sulfate.
  • Safety goggles
  • Optional: Flashlight
  • Optional: Masking tape and pen or marker to label the skewers with the chemical names

Safety Tips:

  • When you burn the skewers, be sure to do it in an open, outdoor area and be careful not to breathe the fumes or smoke from the skewers.
  • Adult supervision is needed when using fire, burning the skewers, and handling the chemicals.
  • This activity uses a small candle flame to maximize safety, but you should have a container of water handy for dousing any unintended flames.

Procedure:

  1. Pour a small amount of table salt (roughly one tablespoon) into a small plastic bag.
  2. Apply a thin layer of glue to the lastinch of the tip of a skewer. Just a little bit of glue is enough.

    How Fireworks Get Their Colors - Science Friday (2)

  3. Dip the glue-coated tip of the skewer into the salt in the bag. Twist the skewer back and forth a bit to coat the skewer’s tip with the salt. Set the skewer aside to dry.

    How Fireworks Get Their Colors - Science Friday (3)

  4. Repeat this process with two more skewers so you have a total of three skewers that have their tips coated with salt.
  5. Next, have an adult coat a skewerwith copper sulfate—but first read and follow all safety precautions on the packaging that the copper sulfate came in. Be careful not to let anybody breathe in any copper sulfate dust or get any on their skin or face. If desired, use disposable gloves and safety goggles. If not using gloves, be sure not to touch the copper sulfate. The adult should coatthe lastinch of the tip of a skewer in a thin layer of glue and dip the glue-coated tip into the bag of blue-colored copper sulfate, twisting it back and forth to coat the tip in copper sulfate.

    How Fireworks Get Their Colors - Science Friday (4)

  6. The adult should repeatthis with two more skewers, so that you have three total that are coated in copper sulfate.
  7. Allow all of your skewers to dry. This will take about half an hour for each.
  8. When it is dark (or twilight) outside, take your candle, matches, and prepared skewers to an open area outside where you can safely burn a candle. Be sure there is good air flow. Also have a container of water with you as a safety precaution.
  9. Have an adult light the candle.
  10. Once the candle is burning well, carefully take out one of the prepared skewers and hold the chemical-coated end in the flame. Be sure not to breathe the fumes or smoke from the burning skewer! What color does the chemical burn? How does it compare to the normal color of the candle’s flame?
  11. Tip: You may be able to see the chemical’s color in the candle’s flame, or by holding the skewer away from the candle (once the chemical has caught on fire) and looking at the flame on the chemical-coated end of the skewer.
  12. The skewer may also catch fire after a few moments. Simply remove it from the flame and blow it out, or extinguish it in the container of water.
  13. Repeat this process for the other chemical-coated skewers. (To help you distinguish which chemical you are burning, remember that the skewers coated in table salt will have white-coated tips, while the skewers coated in copper sulfate will have blue-coated tips.) Which color does the table salt (sodium chloride) burn? Which color does the copper sulfate burn? If you burn other chemicals, what color(s) do they burn?

Cleanup

Be sure to extinguish the candle and the skewers when you are done with the activity. When you are sure they have been extinguished, you can dispose of the used chemical-coated skewers in the garbage.

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What Happened?

A typical flame will burn yellow/orange with a little bit of blue near the base of the wick. When you burned the skewer tip coated with sodium chloride, you should have seen that the flame on the sodium chloride was pure yellow/orange (without any blue). This is because when the metal sodium is heated, it makes intense yellow/orange light. When you burned the skewer tip coated with copper sulfate, you should have seen that the flame gained blue-green traces. This is because when the copper is heated, it makes bluish-green light. If you tested additional chemicals from the Rainbow Fire kit, you should have seen that the boric acid burned a vivid green and the strontium chloride burned red.

Today when we watch fireworks displays, there are many colors represented, but this was not always the case. From the time fireworks were invented (the earliest documentation is from around the 7th century C.E. China) until the 1830s, all fireworks were either white or orange. Then, in the 1830s, the Italians discovered that adding metal salts to the fireworks mixture resulted in interesting colors, just like in the flame test in this activity.

Digging Deeper

Colored flames are not just for fireworks displays; the same science that shows us a pretty colored flame allows astronomers to figure out what distant stars are made of (in other words, their atomic composition) by seeing what type of light is produced by the star. How does it work exactly? It comes down to atoms and energy.

All matter is made of atoms. Atoms have a nucleus that is surrounded by electrons. Electrons moving around the nucleus have certain amounts of energy, called energy levels. If electrons gain energy, they move from one energy level up to a higher level through distinct steps. Likewise, if electrons lose energy, they drop down to a lower energy level. The lost energy can be carried away in the form of heat or in the form of light (as a photon). Exactly how much energy is lost affects what kind of light is made, which we may perceive as a difference in the color of the light. Different types of atoms, or elements, have different gaps between their energy levels, which causes them to make light of different colors when they are burned and lose that energy.

For Further Exploration

You could try this activity using other metal salts known to produce certain flame colors when burned. Check out the Science Buddies Rainbow Firescience project for some ideas. Be sure to always look into and follow all proper safety precautions when handling different chemicals and burning them. What colors do other metal salts make when burned?

Credits: Teisha Rowland, PhD, Science Buddies

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Related Links:

  • For a printable version of this activity, visit Science Buddies.
  • Watch Science Friday’s video “Celebrating Explosive Chemistry” for another explanation of the salts in fireworks.

How Fireworks Get Their Colors - Science Friday (7)Since 2001,www.ScienceBuddies.orghas been engaging young people in science and engineering. Every year our website helps millions of K-12 students create hands-on science and engineering projects of outstanding quality, interact with real-life science and engineering role models, compete in their local science fairs, and ultimately become inspired to pursue further education in science and technology.

Meet the Writer

About Science Buddies

Science Buddies dedicates itself to helping students from all walks of life build their literacy in science and technology, so they can become productive and engaged citizens in the 21st century. See more projects at www.sciencebuddies.org

How Fireworks Get Their Colors - Science Friday (2024)

FAQs

How Fireworks Get Their Colors - Science Friday? ›

The color, or colors, that a firework makes depends on what color-producing chemicals are in the firework. These chemicals are various metal salts that make different, specific colors as they are heated.

How does fireworks get their colors? ›

Barium produces bright greens; strontium yields deep reds; copper produces blues; and sodium yields yellow. Other colors can be made by mixing elements: strontium and sodium produce brilliant orange; titanium, zirconium, and magnesium alloys make silvery white; copper and strontium make lavender.

What is the chemistry of fireworks answer? ›

All fireworks have four main ingredients—fuel, oxidizing agent, colorant and binder. The fuel is the material that explodes. The oxidizing agent supplies the extra oxygen needed to cause the shells to explode. Colorants produce the array of colors typical of aerial blasts.

How does Bohr's model of the atom explain how fireworks give off their colors or how neon lights glow? ›

Bohr explained that electrons exist in specific layers, or energy levels. An atom emits light when it is heated because the electrons jump to a higher energy level, then emit colored light as they drop back down to a lower energy level. The emitted colored light corresponds to a color in the emission spectrum.

How does fireworks work science? ›

The shell is filled with small pellets, known as stars. Once the firework reaches a certain height, a second fuse, sometimes called the timed fuse, ignites and activates the burst charge. This sets off the stars within the firework, which explode into a dazzling display of colours, sounds and other effects.

How do fireworks work chemistry? ›

So how does it work? Once lit with a fuse or spark, the sulfur melts first at 235 F (112.8 C). The sulfur flows over the potassium nitrate and charcoal, which then burn. This combustion reaction quickly produces a large amount of energy and gas – in other words, an explosion.

How do fireworks get their color red? ›

There are seven mineral elements commonly used in fireworks, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. To create red fireworks, strontium is used. The mineral is also used in ceramic magnets and oil and gas production. Sodium, the fourth-most abundant mineral in the world, is used for yellow fireworks.

What chemicals make colors in fireworks? ›

What minerals produce the colors in fireworks?
Color ProducedElement(s)Primary mineral ore(s)
bright greensbariumbarite
deep redsstrontiumcelestite
bluescopperchalcopyrite
yellowssodiumhalite (rock salt)
3 more rows

What is the science of fireworks called? ›

Pyrotechnics is the science and craft of creating such things as fireworks, safety matches, oxygen candles, explosive bolts and other fasteners, parts of automotive airbags, as well as gas-pressure blasting in mining, quarrying, and demolition.

What type of chemistry is fireworks? ›

The explosion of fireworks is an exothermic redox reaction. The fuel oxidizes (burns) quickly, causing a great buildup in pressure that eventually leads to solids and gases bursting across the sky in colorful patterns.

How do fireworks work chemistry for kids? ›

Firework's Different Colors

Buried within the gunpowder are stars (pellets) of different types of powders, salts, and other substances that create bright sparks of many colors. For example, a substance called strontium creates a bright red color. Another one called calcium produces an orange color when it is lit.

What are the facts about the chemistry of fireworks? ›

Different chemicals burn at different wavelengths of light. Strontium and lithium compounds produce deep reds; copper produces blues; titanium and magnesium burn silver or white; calcium creates an orange color; sodium produces yellow pyrotechnics; and finally, barium burns green.

How do we get pure colored fireworks? ›

The color in fireworks are produced from a single source: pure chemistry. The fireworks you see in the sky are created by the explosion of multiple small pellets of black powder, also known as stars. Once the powder has been ignited, those stars can be arranged to make different shapes in the sky.

Who added color to fireworks? ›

Early history of fireworks

Fast forward another millennium, and the Italians figured out how to add color by introducing various elements to the flammable mix. Adding the element strontium to a color pyrotechnic mix produces a red flame; copper, blue; barium, green; and sodium for yellow.

What is the hardest color to create for fireworks? ›

The color blue has been the Holy Grail for pyrotechnics experts since fireworks were invented more than a millennium ago. It's by far the hardest color to produce.

Why are there no blue fireworks? ›

Strontium chloride, the compound used to make red fireworks, can withstand at least 1,500 degrees Fahrenheit. That's hotter than some lava. But to make a blue firework, you need copper chloride, which is much more fragile.

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