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Iodine clock reaction

This is the hydrogen peroxide/ potassium iodide ‘clock’ reaction.

A solution of hydrogen peroxide is mixed with one containing potassium iodide, starch and sodium thiosulfate. After a few seconds the colourless mixture suddenly turns dark blue. This is one of a number of reactions loosely called the iodine clock. It can be used as an introduction to experiments on rates / kinetics.

Read our standard health & safety guidance

Lesson organisation

This demonstration can be used at secondary level as an introduction to some of the ideas about kinetics. It can be used to stimulate discussion about what factors affect the rate of reaction. It also makes a useful starting-point for a student investigation.

As described this is intended as a demonstration, best done on a large scale for the most visual impact. The demonstration itself takes less than 1 minute. For a student investigation, the quantities required would be smaller but volumes then need to be measured quite accurately with, for example, disposable plastic syringes.

Apparatus and Chemicals

Eye protection
Balance (1 or 2 d.p.)
Beaker (1 dm3)
Beaker (250 cm3)
Volumetric flasks (1 dm3), 2
Measuring cylinder (50 cm3)
Measuring cylinders (100 cm3), 2
Stirring rod or magnetic stirrer and follower (optional)
Stopclock/timer

0.2g soluble starch
Glacial (concentrated) ethanoic acid (Corrosive), 30 cm3 (see note 3)
Anhydrous sodium ethanoate (sodium acetate, CH3CO2Na), 4.1 g (Low hazard)
Potassium iodide (KI), 50 g. (Low hazard)
Sodium thiosulfate-5-water (Na2S2O3.5H2O), 9.4 g (Low hazard) (see note 2)
20 volume hydrogen peroxide solution (H2O2(aq)), 500 cm3 (Irritant) (see note 3)
Deionised/distilled water, 2 dm3.

Technical notes

Glacial (concentrated) ethanoic acid is Corrosive. Refer to CLEAPSS Hazcard 38 (2007:38A)
20 vol hydrogen peroxide is Irritant. Refer to CLEAPSS Hazcard 30.

1 Solutions A and B should be made up before the demonstration. The solutions will keep overnight, but best results are obtained if the solutions are made up on the day.

2 Sodium thiosulfate will react with acids to give sulfur dioxide and a precipitate of sulfur, hence the sodium thiosulfate and ethanoic acid are separated in solutions A and B respectively.

3 Handling glacial ethanoic acid requires care (Corrosive) and should be done in a fume cupboard using gloves and eye protection.

If you have access to 1 mol dm-3 dilute ethanoic acid, use 500 cm3 of this to make solution B. Mix 500 cm3 of 20 volume hydrogen peroxide with 500 cm3 of 1 mol dm-3 ethanoic acid.

Procedure: Making up solutions A and B

HEALTH & SAFETY: Wear eye protection

Solution A is made up as follows:

a Make a paste of 0.2 g of soluble starch with a few drops of water in a beaker. Pour onto this approximately 100 cm3 of boiling water and stir.

b Pour the resulting solution into a 1 dm3 beaker and dilute to around 800 cm3.

c Add 4.1 g of sodium ethanoate, 50 g of potassium iodide and 9.4 g of sodium thiosulfate. Stir until all the solids have dissolved and allow to cool to room temperature.

d Pour the mixture into a 1 dm3 volumetric flask and make up to 1 dm3 with water.

Solution B is made up as follows:

e In a 1 dm3 volumetric flask mix 500 cm3 of 20 volume hydrogen peroxide with 30 cm3 of glacial ethanoic acid and dilute to 1 dm3 with water. (See Technician notes about using dilute ethanoic acid as a less hazardous alternative)

Both solutions are colourless although solution A will be slightly cloudy.

The demonstration

f Measure 100 cm3 of solution A and 100 cm3 of solution B in separate 100 cm3 measuring cylinders.

g Pour both solutions simultaneously into a 250 cm3 beaker to mix. Ensure thorough mixing with a stirring rod or magnetic stirrer.

h After about 20 seconds at room temperature the mixture will suddenly turn dark blue.

The appearance of the blue colour may be timed – an assistant/student can start and stop the timer.

Additional notes

1 Hydrogen peroxide is capable of oxidising thiosulfate ions to tetrathionate
ions but the reaction is too slow to affect this demonstration.

2 The ethanoic acid/sodium ethanoate is added to buffer the pH.

3 The acid will react slowly with sodium thiosulfate and produce a cloudy suspension of sulfur and release sulfur dioxide which is TOXIC – refer to CLEAPSS Hazcard 97. To avoid this the acid and sodium thiosulfate are separated in solutions A and B.

4 The CLEAPSS Guide L195 ‘Safer chemicals, safer reactions’ gives useful information about how to carry out rates experiments involving acid/thiosulfate mixtures more safely.

Teaching notes

Visual tips: a white background will help so that the impact of the sudden and spectacular colour change is not lost. Scaling up the volumes of solution that are mixed may help in a large room.

There is no warning of when the blue colour is about to appear.

It may help understanding if the students are already familiar with the reactions of starch and iodine, and iodine and sodium thiosulfate, so it may be worth demonstrating these beforehand.

The basic reaction is:

H2O2(aq) + 2I (aq) + 2H+ (aq) → I2(aq) + 2H2O(l)

[For more advanced discussions or investigations - this reaction is the rate determining step and is first order with respect to both H2O2 and I.]

As soon as the iodine is formed, it reacts with the thiosulfate to form tetrathionate ions and recycles the iodide ions by the fast reaction:

2S2O32–(aq) + I2(aq) → S4O62–(aq) + 2 I (aq)

As soon as all the thiosulfate is used up, free iodine (or, strictly, I3- ions) remains in solution and reacts with the starch to form the familiar blue-black complex.

The time for the blue colour to appear can be adjusted by varying the amount of thiosulfate in solution A so a ‘clock’ of any desired time interval can be produced.

If the demonstration is being done for entertainment, the imaginative teacher will be able to think up some suitable patter.

Health and Safety checked, November 2006

Updated 29 Oct 2008

Average rating: 4 out of 5

Your reviews

This page is good. A few images would make it better.

Submitted by: Harish K on 26 June 2008

Interesting concepts...but it is better if the concept of the rate-determining step and mechanism of the starch-iodine complex can be explained?

Submitted by: Alfredo on 10 November 2008

Great modifications. You may want to include the concentration of the initial hydrogen peroxide solution: 3% or 30%, as it can be obtained readily in both concentrations.

Submitted by: Alan Beamer on 11 November 2008

I did this reaction myself here in University of Ghana and it was absolutely perfect>

Submitted by: addo jonathan on 10 November 2008

I think the amount of potassium iodide may be wrong? The blue colour quickly gives way to brown and a large amount of elemental iodine is produced. Maybe it should be 5 g?

Submitted by: Paul Birch on 18 December 2008

This, my friends, is an outrage of a "test". Who has a 1 dm3 beaker? Do YOU? DO YOU? NO! And neither do I! Otherwise it is very good, five stars!

Submitted by: Mr Hand on 8 May 2009

Always a thriller!

Submitted by: Will on 14 January 2009

I DID THIS EXPERIMENT HERE IN UNIVERSITY OF LIMPOPO, IT'S VERY INTERESTING!

Submitted by: MAHLATSE CHRISTY NARE on 20 February 2009

First time I saw it, it looked like magic!

Submitted by: Ana on 28 May 2009

The experiment is well written out and explained but maybe you should change the concentrations or one of the variables to see the differences?

Submitted by: Mr Green on 19 June 2009

I love chemistry. Sometimes I think it is even cooler than birds (and you all know how much I love birds).

Submitted by: Paul Cooper on 13 November 2009

 

Submitted by: James Nicholls on 17 December 2009

This reaction was very helpful to me. Thanks.

Submitted by: David Curnick on 17 December 2009

This is very helpful to me. Please give the definition and why it is called as the Clock Reaction.

Submitted by: shravani on 10 February 2010

It is a very good reaction to introduce anyone to reaction kinetics, done this at UWE Bristol this year

Submitted by: D Finch on 16 April 2010

C'était éblouissant!
Ça marche très bien!....c'est facile et génial!, merci!!
-Université d'Ottawa au Canada

Submitted by: BeauHomme on 20 April 2010

I want to make a pointer or digital clock using a redox reaction. Could you help me?

Submitted by: Abdur Ra7man M. MELIEGY on 20 April 2010

I have a 1 dm3 beaker... if that helps Mr Hand? This is experiment is otherwise really good.

Submitted by: Bartholomew Dezereal on 21 April 2010

Good, but could someone tell me the moles of solution A.

Submitted by: ted on 25 June 2010

Good but could someone tell me the number of moles of solution A.

Submitted by: ted teddingson on 25 June 2010

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