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activity: pH Testing
The pH scale is a way of measuring how acidic
or alkaline a substance is.
We use indicators to show us the pH of a substance.
Indicators like universal indicator change colour depending on whether
a substance is acid or alkaline. Universal indicator is particularly
useful because it changes to a range of different colours, so tells
us how acidic, or how alkaline a substance is. If it changes red,
orange or yellow (pH 1-6), it tells us the substance is acidic. A
colour change of greenish blue, blue or purple (pH 7-14) indicates
an alkali. If it turns green, then the substance is neutral (pH
7).

Most fish prefer water with a pH between 7 and 8.
If the pH is outside the range 5 to 8.5 the water is seriously polluted
with acid or alkali.
What
you will need:
- 5 samples of water
- tap water, distilled water and 3 other sources (this could be
tap water from a different area, pond water, river water, sea
water)
- narrow range pH paper
- several clean, dry
test tubes
- test tube rack, or
large beaker to hold the test tubes in
Click here for
more information on collecting water samples.
What
you will do:
- Pour 1 cubic cm of
a water sample into a test tube.
- Add the pH paper
and note down the colour change.
- Pour the water sample
away and throw the pH paper in the bin. Don't leave the pH paper
in the sink!!

What
do you observe?
You can record your results in a table like this:
| water
sample |
colour
change |
pH
value |
acid
or alkaline |
| tap
water |
|
|
|
| distilled
water |
|
|
|
| sea
water |
|
|
|
| pond
water |
|
|
|
| river
water |
|
|
|
Questions:
- Did you find any
pattern to your results? For instance, were the water samples
mostly acidic, alkaline or neutral?
- Why was it important
to use dry test tubes for this experiment?
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