August 3, 2011
A teacher attending Julie Gintzler’s Story Time Slime this weekend in Springfield, Illinois took this picture of Julie launching a 12 foot geyser!
Julie left the bottles of Diet Coke in her car with a 104 degree heat index for the day. The hot soda was the perfect ingredient to blast some super high geysers. That may be one for the Geyser Hall of Fame.
Tags: Diet Coke, diet coke and mentos experiment, Geyser Tube, huge fountain of soda, huge geyser, julie ginztler, Mentos, Mentos and soda, mentos diet coke, mentos geyser record, Mentos Soda Fountain, soda geyser, story time slime
Filed under: Cool Products, Julie Gintzler, Mentos Geyser
July 23, 2008


It’s probably the most asked question we get… “How exactly does that experiment with the Mentos and Diet Coke really work?” From the outset (nearly eight years ago), we hypothesized that the exploding soda was a physical reaction, and the key factor in the release of carbon dioxide was the microscopic pits on the surface
of the chewy mint. However, there was no real scientific study that anyone could point to as the definitive answer… until now. In the June issue of the American Journal of Physics, Tonya S. Coffey, an assistant professor of physics and astronomy at Appalachian State University, in Boone, N.C., and her team of fearless physics students reported on the ingredients, temperature dependence, duration, and other parameters of the suddenly famous Mentos-Diet Coke reaction.
There has been considerable debate over gum arabic (found in the coating of the mint) and the role it plays in the physical reaction. Coffey’s group was able to confirm that the surfactant gum arabic is a key component of the reaction: It reduces surface tension, thereby
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Tags: American Journal of Physics, Appalachian State University, Diet Coke Mentos Experiment, How Mentos reaction works, Mentos, Mentos and soda, mentos diet coke, Mentos Geyser, Mentos Geyser, mentos geysers, mentos science experiment, Tonya S. Coffey
Filed under: In the News, Mentos Geyser, Science Experiments
August 12, 2007


Tune into Food Network’s Unwrapped to get a peek inside the Spangler Science labs as Steve shares the science behind the Mentos Geyser all of that exploding soda. Back in December, I mentioned that a crew from Unwrapped on the Food Network wanted to get the real scoop on the popular Mentos and soda reaction. The crew spent an entire day grabbing the reaction from every angle and trying to understand how all of those tiny bubbles produce such a huge fountain of soda. The episode is scheduled to air on September 24, 2007. Consult your local listing for time and channel.
Tags: diet coke and mentos, exploding soda, Food Network, food network unwrapped, huge fountain of soda, mad scientist, Mentos, Mentos and soda, mentos diet coke, Mentos Geyser, Mentos Geyser, mentos light coke, mentos science experiment, Mentos Soda Fountain, minitastic episode, science experiment, Science Lab, Spangler, spangler science labs, spangler unwrapped, steve spangler, Steve Spangler Science, teaching science, tiny bubble, Unwrapped, unwrapped on the food network
Filed under: In the News
July 11, 2007


Dropping a roll of Mentos into a bottle of soda used to be something that kids did for fun. Now adults are getting into the act. I opened my e-mail and received these cool pictures from the organizers of the event that took place on July 10th in Flower Mound, TX. Representatives from the Guinness World Records certified the record-setting effort, which went off at 6:30 pm inside the Circle R Ranch Rodeo Arena where 850 independent sales representatives from Books Are Fun, a Reader’s Digest Company, simultaneously dropped Mentos into 850 two-liter bottles of soda using the Geyser Tube Toy. The previous Mentos geyser record was set on May 24, 2007 in Cincinnati, Ohio when 504 Mentos-and-Coke geysers were set off.
Watch the Video: The Largest Number of Simultaneous Mentos GeysersÂ
Please remember that you’re looking at 850 screaming adults… not kids… running away. Yes, learning is fun for people of all ages.
Tags: 504 Mentos and Coke geysers, Guinness World Records, Mentos, Mentos and Coke geysers, Mentos and soda, Mentos Experiement, Mentos Geyser, mentos geyser record, Science Video, steve spangler, Steve Spangler Science, The Largest Number of Simultaneous Mentos Geysers, YouTube video
Filed under: Mentos Geyser
April 8, 2007


Thousands of science teachers found their way to St. Louis for the 2007 National Science Teachers Association convention, and we wanted to make sure they had something to take back to their students. So, we loaded our trucks with experiments and products from the website along with 5,000 rolls of MENTOS stuffed into plastic test tubes and headed for the Gateway City. We were fortunate to have 14 teacher ambassadors from the Hands-on Science Institute join us in the booth to each share their favorite science activities. Aside from 500 bottles of Diet Coke and a mountain of MENTOS, all eyes were on the 18 foot tall soda eruption chamber. We were demonstrating the new Geyser Tube by triggering a MENTOS geyser as fast as we could set-up a launch (about every 2-3 minutes for 3 full days). At the end of the convention, the soda was gone, the rolls of MENTOS were in the hands of 5,000 teachers, the truck was cleaned out… and we all had a blast. It’s back to the classroom for the 14 ambassadors to start working on cool stuff for
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Tags: 2007 National Science Teachers Association convention, Coca Cola, Coke, coke and mentos, diet coke and mentos, diet coke mentos, Diet Coke Mentos Experiment, experiment, experiments, Geyser Tube, Mentos, Mentos and soda, mentos diet coke, Mentos Geyser, Mentos Geyser, National Science Teachers Association, science experiment, Science Experiments, science fair projects for kids, science fair projects ideas, science for kids, science lesson plans, Science Teacher, science teachers, Spangler, spangler science labs, St Louis, Steve Spangler Science, Teacher Training, teaching science
Filed under: Mentos Geyser, Teaching Moments