The Van de Graaf makes some Vermiculite dance like crazy!


WATCH VIDEO 

 

Teachable Topics:
  • Charged particles
  • Van de Graaff Generator
  • Electric potential

 

Theory:

Every point around a charged object (such as a Van de Graaf generator's dome) has an electric potential, V.

The potential near a positively charged Van de Graaf (VDG) machine is positive, while the potential far away from it is lower. The potential near a negatively charged object is negative, and thus lower still.

 

Electric Potential vs Distance

Figure 1: Electric potential over a distance

A particle with charge +q brought near the (positively charged) VDG tends to move to the position where V is the lowest. This is another way of saying that the particle is repelled from the VDG.

In the "Volta's Hailstorm" demo, a plastic tube is enclosed on either end by metal plates, and the bottom end is electrically attached to the VDG. Within the tube are some vermiculite chips. When the VDG is turned on, the bottom becomes positively charged (thus giving it a high electric potential). The metal bottom of the tube transfers positive electric charge to the vermiculite particles. These then tend to move to the uncharged top of the tube, where the potential is lower. As the particles hit the top of the tube, they transfer their positive charge to it. After transferring their charge, the now-neutral particles fall to the bottom of the tube. 

Volta's Hailstorm

Eventually so much charge is imparted to the metal top that is has the same electric potential as the bottom. Consequently, the particles stop rising up.

If something happens to remove the positive charge from the top of the tube, it becomes electrically neutral. This can be accomplished by connecting a grounded wire to the top of the tube. With the top of the tube grounded, charged particles flee the high-potential bottom of the tube and give their charge to the top. The particles are neutralized and quickly fall to the bottom of the tube again, where the whole process repeats again and again. This creates the "hailstorm" seen in the videos. 


 Apparatus:

  • Van de Graaf
  • Grounding rod
  • Vermiculite particles in a "Volta's Hailstorm" Tube

Procedure:
  • Set up the apparatus as shown in the picture below.
  • Turn on the Van de Graaf generator, and watch as the vermiculite particles fly up and bounce off the top plate. Eventually the top accumulates enough charge that no more particles rise up. Just as a charged balloon will stick to a non-conducting surface like a wall, some particles will stick to the walls of the tube.
  • Now take the grounding rod and tap the top on the tube. This will remove the charge from the top plate and cause the positively charged particles from the bottom of the tube to rise up, give their charge to the top plate, and fall back to the bottom. Eventually the charge transfer stops when the top plate is at the same potential as the bottom.
  • With the rod in hand, hold it on top of the tube, and the particles will travel between the top and bottom over and over again in a flurry of charge transfer.

Volta's Hailstorm Demo

Figure 2: Apparatus

 


SAFETY WARNINGS:

  • A Van de Graaff can produce a lot of charge! Touch the Van der Graff and Volta's Hailstorm tube only with the grounding rod.
  • The demo seems to work best when the tube is far away from the Van de Graaf.

Search 'em up!