Spark image

Bubble rafts

A very useful two-dimensional model of the three-dimensional crystal can be made with a bubble raft. The basic apparatus is shown in Figure 1(a).

A petri dish is partly filled with a bubble solution of 1 part 'Teepol', S parts glycerol and 32 parts water by volume. Using the 25-gauge hypodermic syringe connected to the gas tap a raft of bubbles may be blown. The appearance will be similar to that shown in Figure 2(b). You will notice how all the bubbles pack together lust like atoms in a crystal. The surface tension between the bubbles pulls them together, and the pressure inside them prevents them from getting too close.

These bubble rafts behave like real solids: if they are compressed slightly they will return to their original state but if too great a force is applied they will rupture, or one plane of bubbles will slide past another.

Very rarely will a perfect raft of bubbles be formed; more usually, large bubbles or missing bubbles will show as discontinuities — a model of dislocations in a three-dimensional crystal.


Figures 2(a) to (c) illustrate the formation of a dislocation in a crystal. They also illustrate how the dislocation may move through the solid as one crystal plane slides over the other.

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© Keith Gibbs