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Money In A Blender - An Experiment

One of my son’s favorite websites is SteveSpanglerScience.Com. He visits that site as often as possible to look for new and fun “experiments”. One of the more recent experiments we’ve tried is the “Money In A Blender”. See, in an effort to prevent counterfeiting, U.S Dollars are printed with special ink that contains traces of iron and other magnetic materials. The idea of this experiment is to extract the iron from a dollar bill. So here goes:

Materials:
You’ll need:
- A $1 bill
- A kitchen blender
- Water
- A zipper-lock bag
- Super Strong Neodymium Magnet (we didn’t have one of these so we used a magnet out of his “magnetix” collection. It worked just as well.
- Some adult supervision.

Follow these steps:
1. Fill the blender half full with water (about 3-4 cups)
2. Place the dollar bill in the blender and pop on the lid.
3. Blend, liquify, grind the dollar bill til it looks like soup.
4. After the dollar bill is thoroughly “blended”, pour the contents into a ziplock bag and make sure to seal it.
5. Place the magnet in the palm of your hand and place the bag of money soup on top of the magnet. Place your last remaining hand on top of the bag and rock the slurry back and forth in an effort to draw all of the iron to the magnet. Flip your hands over and look closely at the iron that is attracted to the magnet. You can slowly pull the magnet away from the bag to reveal the iron!

Isn’t that neat? The video can be found here.

My son enjoyed this experiment so much he took the contents to school to show his class how he extracted iron from a dollar bill. :)

**The U.S. Treasury has an unofficial comment on this activity “ As long as you don’t try to spend your ˜liquid money”, you can do whatever you want with your dollar bill, I guess.” So, don’t try to spend the money after you blend it.

Filed under Fun Experiments For Kids, School, Science, Steve Spangler

Commenters: Amanda, Amanda, Ana, Anna, Heather, Julie, Lisa, Mishie, tracy


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12 Comments »

Comment by Ana
2008-03-21 05:07:30

lol that sounds cool althrough a waste of a dollar but what the heck its a dollar haha
nah I won’t try it..
I am kinda tight on money haha the video looks cool through oh yeah nice site by the way like the flower

Comment by Angela
2008-03-24 12:24:36

haha. On the Steve Spangler Science website, it says to borrow the dollar from a friend. :X

 
 
Comment by Amanda
2008-03-21 22:17:36

That sounds rather interesting! The statement from the Treasury makes me laugh though - makes me wonder if anyone’s actually tried to spend their dollar after they’ve blended it up!

 
Comment by Anna
2008-03-22 09:17:15

That is really cool! I might have to try that…

 
Comment by Amanda
2008-03-22 13:16:57

Haha, when I was younger, I loved doing little experiments like that. I used to have a book that was filled with science experiments geared towards kids and would make a mess every weekend trying a new one.

Thank you for your comment, too. I really appreciated your kind words. :)

Comment by Angela
2008-03-24 12:25:21

My son has a couple of books like that. He absolutely loves science.

 
 
Comment by Heather
2008-03-22 15:46:22

Wow, that is really cool. Makes me miss science class in school.

 
Comment by Julie
2008-03-22 22:40:36

Hah, one certainly should not try to spend blended money. But that’s an interesting experiment.

 
Comment by Mishie
2008-03-24 09:25:19

Wow that sounds like fun. I’m surprised that the government put iron in our money. Weird!

 
Comment by Lisa
2008-03-26 06:46:37

Very cool!

 
Comment by tracy
2008-03-28 00:18:39

That’s a funny response from the Treasury. I really think that’s neat. I’d like to try that with Molly…or even with Troy since he’s a giant kid.

Comment by Angela
2008-03-28 12:01:18

You can find tons of fun, kid-friendly “experiements” at http://stevespanglerscience.com. I’ll post more in the future as we do them. :)

 
 
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