Freezing a flower in liquid nitrogen Follow FizzicsEd 150 Science Experiments: Comments 2 You will need: NOTHING. Do not try this at home or school unless you have formal training. Copyright Instruction Video Instruction 1 This experiment works best with large bunches of flowers or large flowers such as a rose or hibiscus. Place the flowers in a tray and carefully pour liquid nitrogen over the flowers. Read the explanation below after watching the short video on liquid nitrogen freezing a flower. 2 After cooling the flowers to -196 degrees Celsius, the flowers will retain their shape but are also incredibly brittle. 3 If you give the bunch of flowers a squeeze with a gloved hand, the flower petals will crumble and fall down into the tray! 4 Get the Unit of Work on States of Matter here! What are the different states of matter? How does heat affect the size of materials? How does liquid nitrogen affect materials and much more! Includes cross-curricular teaching ideas, student quizzes, a sample marking rubric, scope & sequences & more 5 Go further – buy 5 x student activity sheets as extension worksheets. This student science booklet has been created by experienced science educators from the Fizzics Education team. Use these student worksheets as blackline masters for your science class! See all student sheets here 6 School science visits since 2004! – Curriculum-linked & award-winning incursions. – Over 40 primary & high school programs to choose from. – Designed by experienced educators. – Over 2 million students reached. – Face to face incursions & online programs available. – Early learning centre visits too! 7 Online courses for teachers & parents – Help students learn how science really works Why Does This Happen Liquid nitrogen has a temperature of -196 degrees Celsius. It is so cold that it freezes the water inside the plant cells quite easily. When it has warmed up, the flower becomes quite slimy as some of the cells have broken apart (lysed) and the liquid water inside is able to flow easily. The flower petals have effectively lost their structure. Try this experiment with lettuce leaves or a banana too! Applications Freezing flowers using liquid nitrogen is one way that cut flowers can be preserved through freeze-drying. By rapidly cooling the flowers, the ice crystals inside the cells do not get large enough to break the cell walls (thereby retaining the flower structure). Once the flowers are frozen solid, the moisture within the flowers is then carefully removed using a vacuum pump which causes the solid ice to sublimate into a gas which the vacuum pump then slowly moves to another chamber. Through this technique, the flowers have their water removed so that the colours remain without liquid water inside the plant. A lack of water means that the colours do not degrade due to chemical reactions that are helped by the presence of water. Once the flowers are freeze-dried, they can be returned to normal room temperatures and placed on display! Classroom activity sheets for this experiment Create, reflect & extend! Learn more! From basic ecology and digital microscopy to plants for life, we’ve got your living things unit covered! Get in touch with FizzicsEd to find out how we can work with your class. Liquid Nitrogen Show Years K to 6 Maximum 60 students Science show 45 minutes Online Class Available Read More Enquire Now Sale! Biology Madness Science Kit $29.95 Original price was: $29.95.$24.95Current price is: $24.95. inc. GST View Details Add to Cart Trustpilot STEM Full Day Accelerator - Primary Designed from real classroom experiences, this modular day helps you create consistently effective science learning that directly address the new curriculum with easily accessible and cost-effective materials. Read More Enquire Now Be Amazing! How to teach science, the way primary kids love. $29.95 inc. GST View Details Add to Cart Trustpilot
This experiment works best with large bunches of flowers or large flowers such as a rose or hibiscus. Place the flowers in a tray and carefully pour liquid nitrogen over the flowers. Read the explanation below after watching the short video on liquid nitrogen freezing a flower.
After cooling the flowers to -196 degrees Celsius, the flowers will retain their shape but are also incredibly brittle.
If you give the bunch of flowers a squeeze with a gloved hand, the flower petals will crumble and fall down into the tray!
Get the Unit of Work on States of Matter here! What are the different states of matter? How does heat affect the size of materials? How does liquid nitrogen affect materials and much more! Includes cross-curricular teaching ideas, student quizzes, a sample marking rubric, scope & sequences & more
Go further – buy 5 x student activity sheets as extension worksheets. This student science booklet has been created by experienced science educators from the Fizzics Education team. Use these student worksheets as blackline masters for your science class! See all student sheets here
School science visits since 2004! – Curriculum-linked & award-winning incursions. – Over 40 primary & high school programs to choose from. – Designed by experienced educators. – Over 2 million students reached. – Face to face incursions & online programs available. – Early learning centre visits too!
From basic ecology and digital microscopy to plants for life, we’ve got your living things unit covered! Get in touch with FizzicsEd to find out how we can work with your class.
Liquid Nitrogen Show Years K to 6 Maximum 60 students Science show 45 minutes Online Class Available Read More Enquire Now
Sale! Biology Madness Science Kit $29.95 Original price was: $29.95.$24.95Current price is: $24.95. inc. GST View Details Add to Cart Trustpilot
STEM Full Day Accelerator - Primary Designed from real classroom experiences, this modular day helps you create consistently effective science learning that directly address the new curriculum with easily accessible and cost-effective materials. Read More Enquire Now
Designed from real classroom experiences, this modular day helps you create consistently effective science learning that directly address the new curriculum with easily accessible and cost-effective materials.
Be Amazing! How to teach science, the way primary kids love. $29.95 inc. GST View Details Add to Cart Trustpilot
That is fun looking activity. Freezing a flower in liquid nitrogen looks awesome. I am just wondering if liquid nitrogen can be used to extend the vase life of flowers? I am curious about it now. Reply
Hi Allan! We use this demonstration as part of a liquid nitrogen show as it looks fantastic and helps as part of a discussion on cell biology. Freezing flowers using liquid nitrogen is one way that cut flowers can be preserved through freeze-drying… check out the various techniques on this page by the Western Australian government. Once the flowers are frozen, a vacuum pump then removes the moisture slowly so that the flowers will be dry once returned to normal room temperatures. Once done, you can leave the flowers in the vase for much longer than fresh flowers! Reply
This website uses cookies to improve user experience. By using our website you consent to all cookies in accordance with our Cookie Policy.
Thank you for looking to subscribing to our newsletter 🙂 Through this service you’ll be first to know about the newest free experiments, science news and special offers. PLUS: Get a free Kitchen Chemistry Booklet with >20 experiments, how to use variables plus a handy template!
Please fill out the details below and an email will be sent to you. Once you get that just click on the link to confirm your subscription and you're all done!