Squishy Circuits with Play-Doh
Making circuits with Play-doh is pretty cool. If you have some doh at home you can use that for conductive circuits. To take it to the next level you will need some insulating doh as well. Below are recipes for both at home conductive and insulating “Play-doh”.
Making Conductive Play-doh
The Ingredients
- 1 cup Water
- 1 1/2 cups Flour
- 1/4 cup Salt
- 3 Tbsp. Cream of Tartar (or 9Tbsp of lemon juice)
- 1 Tbsp. Vegetable Oil
- Food Coloring (optional)
Cooking Procedure
- Mix water, 1cup of flour, salt, cream of tartar, vegetable oil, and food coloring in a medium sized pot.
- Cook over medium heat and stir continuously.
- The mixture will begin to boil and start to get chunky.
- Keep stirring the mixture until it forms a ball in the center of the pot.
- Once a ball forms, place the ball on a lightly floured surface.
- The ball will be very hot. We suggest flattening it out and letting it cool for a couple minutes before handling.
- Slowly knead the remaining flour into the ball until you’ve reached a desired consistency.
- Store in an airtight container or plastic bag. While in the bag, water from the dough will create condensation. This is normal. Just knead the dough after removing it from the bag, and it will be as good as new. If stored properly, the dough should keep for several weeks.
Making Insulating Play-doh
The Ingredients
- 1 1/2 cup Flour
- 1/2 cup Sugar
- 3 Tbsp. Vegetable Oil
- 1/2 cup Deionized (or Distilled) Water
(You really want to use Distilled water to keep the amount of conductive ions to a minimum. Otherwise, the doh will be conductive rather than insulating.)
Cooking Procedure
- Mix solid ingredients and oil in a pot or large bowl, setting aside ½ cup flour to be used later.
- Mix with this mixture a small amount of deionized water (about 1 Tbsp.) and stir.
- Repeat this step until a majority water is absorbed by the mixture.
- Once your mixture is at this consistency, knead the mixture into one “lump”.
- Knead more water into the dough until it has a sticky, dough-like texture.
- Now, knead in flour to the dough, until a desired texture is reached.
- Store in an airtight container or plastic bag. While in the bag, water from the dough will create condensation. This is normal. Just knead the dough after removing it from the bag, and it will be as good as new. If stored properly, the dough should keep for several weeks.
The idea of creating electrical circuits using Play-doh and the recipes above come from The University of St. Thomas. Check out their Squishy Circuits page for more details.
Making a silvered flask with chemistry
Make your own hovercraft
Our hovercraft is pretty simple in construction. A circle of plywood, a plastic tarp, a coffee can lid and a leaf blower. Check out this video for more information.
How do you build an Earthquake-proof building?
After the massive earthquake near Japan this morning one wonders if it’s possible to build an earthquake-proof building? The answer is yes and no. There are of course, engineering techniques that can be used to create a very sound structure that will endure a modest or even strong quake. Read more
The Earthquake Platform
As part of Engineering Week 2011, we challenge local meteorologist Jay Berschback to build a stable tower on our Earthquake platform exhibit. Using only foam noodles and some cross-bracing he must construct a stable tower at least 5 stories tall. Find out if he can meet the challenge. Read more
Breaking Glass
Find out what kinds of glass auto engineers use for the windshield and side windows of your car – and how they break. Read more
ENGINEER IT!
Think It. Build It. Test It … Do It Again!
ENGINEER IT! is an educational and entertaining interactive learning world that presents science as an open-ended discovery process. Visitors of all ages can explore the fun and creative sides of engineering by designing boats, windmills, airplanes, buildings and bridges. Then test their performance in wind tunnels, earthquake simulators and water tanks. Read more
The Blade Paper Tower Challenge
Design a Newspaper Tower
Saturday, August 13, 2011
10am-5pm
Visitors are invited to participate in this Engineering Challenge, brought to us by The Blade. Teams must build an 18-inch tall tower constructed solely from newspaper and tape that must support the weight of an ordinary baseball. Once completed, the tower must ‘Pass the Test’ – that is, towers will be placed directly in the path of a fan and must remain standing to be considered eligible. All supplies will be provided. Towers constructed off site are eligible to win as long as they pass the test. Prizes will be awarded to the engineers of the three lightest towers that pass the wind test. Read more