Fermentation in a Bag

Elementary
Middle School
High School
Investigation
Stand-Alone Activity

Selected by CLEANIn this simple experiment, students investigate the process of fermentation in resealable bags with bakers yeast, warm water and various sources of plant sugar. Students observe and measure evidence of the chemical changes associated with fermentation: bag inflation (CO2) and indicators of ethanol production. Younger students can observe fermentation in a single bag, while older students can create multiple set-ups to compare how yeast ferments sugar, starch and cellulose-based biomass options. Students can measure and compare fermentation rates between feedstocks using a variety of methods including ethanol probes, breathalyzers or bag inflation. This activity works well in a variety of formal and nonformal educational settings. In the classroom setting, it can serve as an engaging activity to launch more in-depth investigations into biofuels.

Extend the learning by combing this activity with the Modern Scientist-Engineer in the World of Fermentation research story, Boosting Yeast's Appetite for Sugars data dive, Fermentation Challenge: Making Ethanol from Cellulose activity, and CB2E: Converting Cellulosic Biomass to Ethanol lab.

Subjects
Agriculture
Biology
Environmental Science
Topics
Fermentation & Enzymes
Prior Knowledge
None
Time Required
1-3 50-minute class periods depending on time spent introducing the problem and analyzing results
Required Supplies
Warm water, Dry Active Yeast, Yeast feedstocks (i.e. Sugar, Cornmeal, Corn Stover Powder, Sawdust, and/or other options of your choice), Small Graduated Cylinders (100mL), Measuring Spoons, Resealable zipper bags (“snack” size)