How To Make Slime - Elmer's Glue Recipes
The solution of school glue with borax and water produces a putty-like material that’s elastic and flows very slowly. The glue is actually made of a polymer material. In simplest terms, a polymer is a long chain of identical, repeating molecules. You can use the image of tiny steel chains to understand why this polymer behaves the way it does. Each link in a chain is a molecule in the polymer and one link is identical to another. When the chains are in a pile and you reach in to grab one, that’s what you get: one. If you dump them on the floor, they’re not connected to each other so they spread out everywhere like water. The strands flow over each other like the liquid glue in the bowl.Something caused a change, however. Let’s say you toss a few trillion tiny, round magnets into the pile of steel chains. Now when you reach in to grab one strand, you grab hundreds because the magnets have linked the strands together. If the molecules stick together at a few places along the strand, then the strands are connected to each other and the substance behaves more like a solid. Sodium tetraborate is the chemical in borax that linked the polymers in the glue to form the putty-like material. This process is called cross-linking. The only way to make a thicker or a runnier slime using white glue is to add more or less borax solution as you mix it together. You can’t just add water to make it runnier.
This means you can make a variety of test consistencies of slime in several cups and figure out proportions of ingredients for the one(s) you need or like best. Then all you do is scale-up the formula to the quantity you want to have/need. This slime flows and the speed of the flowing depends on the viscosity of the mixture. A thick, gooey slime has a high viscosity and flows slowly. A low viscosity slime spreads out evenly and fairly quickly. Place a glob on a fingertip or the corner of a desk to determine the viscosity of your slime.
You know what to do to change it, too. If you make a batch that you absolutely love, you can keep it in the fridge for a little while. The reminder to wash your hands before and after making and using your slime is to keep dirt, germs, and goobers out of it for as long as possible. Eventually, it will have to be tossed into the trash, however. It is very easy to make more, though! Do You Recognize This Goo, The blob you made reminds a lot of people (mostly older people, too) of a toy that was very popular in the last half of the 20th Century.
Binney & Smith, the makers of Crayola, bought the rights to Sill Putty® in 1977 and it’s still on the market today. In 1943 James Wright, a chemical engineer, was attempting to create a synthetic rubber to help the war effort during WWII. He was unable to achieve the properties of rubber he was looking for and put his creation on the shelf. He did entertain friends with it and after the war, a salesman for the Dow-Corning Corporation used the putty to entertain some customers. The polymers in Silly Putty have covalent bonds within the molecules, but hydrogen bonds between the molecules. The hydrogen bonds are easily broken. The same thing applies to the slime you just made, too.