The science of macaroni salad Whats in a mixture Josh Kurz

Transcriber: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Jessica Ruby

The world we live in is made of things,

billions and billions of different things,

like pickles and pianos
and dump trucks and octopi.

And even though these things
seem totally different,

they’re all made of the same stuff,
just combined in different ways.

To give you an idea
of how this combining works,

let’s take something apart.

Let’s start with this bowl
of macaroni salad.

If you were to reverse
a recipe for macaroni salad,

you’ll see it’s made by mixing together
a bunch of ingredients,

like macaroni, mayo,
vinegar, vegetables, and mustard.

This type of combining
is called a mixture.

When you make a mixture,

you’re combining
two or more things together

without actually changing
the chemical identity of those things.

Like mud, for example.

The soil and water in mud
haven’t actually changed.

They’re still soil and water,

you’ve just created
a mixture of soil and water – mud.

It turns out that macaroni salad
is actually a mixture of mixtures

because many of the ingredients,
like mayo and mustard,

are already mixtures themselves,

which is nice for us
because if we look closely,

we’ll the see the three main types
of mixtures that exist.

The size of the particles in a mixture
determines the type of mixture.

On one end of the scale is a suspension,
like our muddy water example.

You get this if you take
big chunks of something

and mix it with something else
so those chunks are just floating around.

Take runny mustard for example.

You’ll see a bunch of little particles

like mustard seeds, pepper,
allspice, and minced shallots

all floating around in a liquid,

in this case vinegar with water.

This is called a suspension

because you’ve got particles of one thing
suspended in another.

Now, on the other end
of the spectrum is a solution.

The particles in this
mixture are so small,

they are the actual molecules.

A solution is sort of
like a suspension of molecules

where one type of molecule
is blended or dissolved with another.

Vinegar is an example of a solution

where the molecules of acetic acid
are blended with molecules of water.

The chemical properties
of the molecules haven’t changed,

they’re just evenly mixed together now.

Saltwater and carbonated soda
are both examples of solutions

where other molecules
are dissolved in water.

The last type of mixture
is called a colloid,

which is somewhere
between a suspension and a solution.

It’s when you take two materials
that don’t dissolve

and you make the particles so small
that they can’t separate.

Mayo is what happens
when you take oil and water,

which don’t mix,

and you bind them together,

usually with the help
of another substance called an emulsifier.

In the case of mayo,
it’s lecithin, found in eggs.

And now you are left
with really small globs of oil

hanging out with really
small droplets of water.

Whipped cream, hairspray,
Styrofoam, and Jello

are all other examples of colloids.

So, let’s get back to macaroni salad.

You’ve call colloids like mayo,
suspensions like mustard,

and solutions like vinegar,

but you’ve also got celery, shallots,
and all other vegetable chunks

that are also part of the salad.

These aren’t mixtures, really,
but we can break them up,

just like a TV can be broken up

into smaller and smaller
complex component parts.

In the case of vegetables,
if you keep breaking things up,

they’ll eventually end with thousands
of complex organic molecules,

things like ATP synthase

and RNA transcriptase

and water.

So now, once we’ve unblended
all the solutions,

unmixed all the colloids,
separated all the suspensions

and taken apart all of our vegetables,

we’ve reached the end
of what we can unmix physically.

What we’re left with
is a whole bunch of molecules,

and these molecules
remain chemically the same

whether they are by themselves
or thrown together in a salad.

If you want to separate
these guys even further,

we need to unmix things chemically,

which means we need to start
breaking some bonds.

抄写员:Andrea McDonough
审稿人:Jessica Ruby

我们生活的世界是由

千千万万种不同的东西组成的,

比如泡菜、钢琴
、自卸卡车和章鱼。

即使这些东西
看起来完全不同,

它们都是由相同的东西制成的,
只是以不同的方式组合在一起。

为了让您
了解这种组合是如何工作的,

让我们拆开一些东西。

让我们从
这碗通心粉沙拉开始吧。

如果你要颠倒
通心粉沙拉的食谱,

你会发现它是由
一堆配料混合而成的,

比如通心粉、蛋黄酱、
醋、蔬菜和芥末。

这种类型的
组合称为混合。

当您制作混合物时,

您将
两种或多种事物组合在一起,

而实际上并未改变
这些事物的化学特性。

以泥为例。

泥中的土壤和水
实际上并没有改变。

它们仍然是土壤和水,

你刚刚创造
了土壤和水的混合物——泥。

事实证明,通心粉
沙拉实际上是混合物的混合物,

因为许多成分,
比如蛋黄酱和芥末,

本身就已经是混合物,

这对我们来说很好,
因为如果我们仔细观察,

我们会看到三种主要类型
的混合物 存在的。

混合物中颗粒的大小
决定了混合物的类型。

天平的一端是悬浮液,
就像我们的浑水示例一样。

如果您将
大块的

东西与其他东西混合,那么您就会得到这个,
所以这些块只是漂浮在周围。

以流芥末为例。

你会看到一堆小颗粒,

如芥菜籽、胡椒、
五香粉和切碎的青葱,它们

都漂浮在液体中,

在这种情况下是醋加水。

这被称为悬浮,

因为你有一个东西的粒子
悬浮在另一个。

现在,在光谱的另一端
是一个解决方案。

这种
混合物中的颗粒非常小,

它们是真正的分子。

溶液有点
像分子的悬浮液,

其中一种分子
与另一种分子混合或溶解。

是醋酸
分子与水分子混合的溶液的一个例子。 分子

的化学
性质没有改变,

它们只是均匀地混合在一起。

盐水和碳酸苏打
都是

其他
分子溶解在水中的溶液的例子。

最后一种
混合物称为胶体,

介于悬浮液和溶液之间。

就是当你拿两种
不溶解的材料,

然后你把颗粒弄得小
到不能分开的时候。

蛋黄酱是
当你将油和

水混合

在一起时发生的,

通常在
另一种称为乳化剂的物质的帮助下将它们结合在一起。

就蛋黄酱而言,
它是卵磷脂,存在于鸡蛋中。

现在你只剩
下非常小的

油滴和非常
小的水滴。

鲜奶油、发胶、
聚苯乙烯泡沫塑料和果冻

都是胶体的其他例子。

所以,让我们回到通心粉沙拉。

你称胶体如蛋黄酱、
悬浮液如芥末

和溶液如醋,

但你也有芹菜、青葱
和所有其他蔬菜块

,它们也是沙拉的一部分。

这些不是混合物,真的,
但我们可以将它们分解,

就像电视可以分解

成越来越小的
复杂组件一样。

就蔬菜而言,
如果你不断地分解

它们,它们最终会以成千上万
个复杂的有机分子结束

,比如 ATP 合酶

、RNA 转录酶

和水。

所以现在,一旦我们解开
所有溶液,

解开所有胶体,
分离所有悬浮液

并拆开所有蔬菜,

我们就达到了
物理解混合的极限。

我们剩下的
是一大堆分子

,这些分子
在化学上保持不变,

无论它们是单独存在
还是放在沙拉中。

如果你想进一步分离
这些家伙,

我们需要化学分解,

这意味着我们需要开始
打破一些联系。