The Science Of Glow Sticks

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What do fireflies, TVs, neon signs, and glowsticks have in common?

Hey, it’s me, Lauren. You’ve seen glowsticks before. They bring a festive glow to Halloween trick-or-treating and New Year’s Eve celebrations, and are useful gear for explorers from scuba divers to spelunkers. When you find a bunch of people gathered to party in the dark, at least a few of them will probably be wielding glowsticks. But what the heck are these things? How do they work?”

Glow sticks are powered by a process called chemiluminescence. Don’t let the name scare you – luminescence is just a fancy word for “any emission of light not caused by heating”. We see luminescence in stuff like TVs, neon signs, and fireflies. The chemiluminescence in glowsticks is a pretty simple reaction caused by mixing chemical compounds.

Compounds are made up of different elements bonded together in specific proportions so that they can’t be mechanically separated – it takes a chemical reaction to sort out, for example, the oxygen from the hydrogen in water. When you mix a compound with other stuff, you can set off that reaction. And as the atoms rearrange themselves, they’ll either absorb or release energy.

If you look inside a glowstick, you’ll see that there’s a small glass vial in the tube. This vial typically contains a hydrogen peroxide solution called “the activator”. It’s floating in a solution containing a compound called phenyl oxalate ester and a fluorescent dye.

Still with me? Good.

When you snap a glowstick, the vial breaks, and the hydrogen peroxide reacts with the phenyl oxalate ester, creating two other compounds: phenol and a peroxyacid ester. This peroxyacid stuff is unstable, so it decomposes and produces additional phenol. It also produces a cyclic peroxy compound, which decomposes to carbon dioxide.

This decomposition releases energy to the dye. The electrons in the dye’s atoms jump to a higher level, then fall back down, releasing energy in the form of light. The other chemicals in the fluorescent dye determine the color of this light.

All this happens within moments of snapping and shaking your glowstick. Depending on which compounds are used, the chemical reaction can continue for anywhere from just a few minutes to hours.

Warmer temperatures will accelerate the reaction, making the stick glow brighter but for a shorter amount of time. When it’s cooler, the reaction will slow down, making the light dimmer.

Which means that if you want to preserve your light stick, put it in the freezer overnight -- it won't stop the process, but it will slow it down and drag out the reaction.

So it turns out that there’s some pretty nifty science behind the humble glowstick. Check it out the next time you’re SCUBA diving, partying or… you know. Whatever you do in the dark.

SOURCES:

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Somehow I figured out that leaving a glow stick in the freezer prolongs the light emission. I was probably 6 when I figured this out. Amazing how we used to pick up on things so easily back then. Now we need detailed instructions for everything lol

dam.
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I love that their formula for water isn’t H2O but HO2 😂

jonahtuttle
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this is kinda great because when i was younger, i always wanted to preserve my glowstick and my parents always told me to stick in the fridge and now i know why!!

hillarymedina
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Back in the day when I was a kid in the 80's and 90's I would go into skating rinks and before I would go I would be given a glow stick of my choosing. I chose a blue one. This is one of my favorite memories growing up.

uhavemooface
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I never knew that there was a glass thing in them

moth
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Is their illustration a glowstick or a, uh, um, uh

lookmuch
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soo.... what do u guys do in the dark...

jawadzahid
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her: "still with me"

me:"no

her"good"

chaseschaefer
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Watching this while poking my cat with a super glow stick😂

DizzyAintRight
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So basically to sum up 2:40 minutes. There's a thing inside the thing when you snap the thing it reacts and it glows. Cool

kasnotiek
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I like glow sticks in the dark. Thanks Lauren!

Qermaq
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I would literally break them open on purpose and splatter them all over my walls to make them glow as a kid and still never knew there’s glass in it😭

meganfarrell
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Are you kidding me? Water has 2 hydrogen molecules and 1 oxygen the other way around...

lucasmdunker
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If they contain a hydrogen peroxide solution in the glass vial, won't glowsticks lose their power after a certain amount of time due to the hydrogen peroxide decomposing, even without the vial broken?

Candoran
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Whatever it is that you do in the dark...





What could that possibly be?...

stickygamingtv
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*1:19*

*All the bois felt that* 😖😫😵

TheSecret_PRO
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I just found a glow stick that still works after having it for 8 to 20 years. I just cracked it and it still works. Are glow sticks forever in their life span?

ZEAC
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I have a question. I opened up a glow stick because I was doing a science report on them and I wanted to show the glass tube. In the video, she says the glass tube contains hydrogen peroxide solution and the outer liquid is Phenyl oxalate ester. When i opened mine however, it seemed to be the other way around. the outside liquid was clear ( like hydrogen peroxide) and the glass tube was colored. Is this normal??

randomstuffwithrach
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What are the products and reactants of a glow stick?

jordanxp
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btw is it bad if you eat it because I crushed it with my teeth when I was LITTLE it tasted bad and it kinda burned my skin but my hands looked cool lol

fiff