How to grow sugar crystals (2024)

By Emma Vanstone 1 Comment

Growing sugar crystals is a great experiment for kids as you can observe the results over a few days and watch how the crystals form on lolly sticks. Who doesn’t love science you can eat?

To make it even more fun experiment with different colours and flavours. How about peppermint for Christmas?

If you’re looking for an edible experiment that doesn’t take quite as long as the sugar crystals try one of our easy candy science experiments.

How to grow sugar crystals

What you need:

3 cups of caster sugar

1 cup of water

A lolly stick

Ajar or bowl

Fork

Some sparkles and/or food colouring( optional )

Sugar Crystal Instructions

Place the sugar and water into a pan and heat whilst stirring until the sugar has dissolved ( ask a grown up to help with this part ). Leave the mixture to cool for about 15 minutes. Adda few drops of food colouring or ediblesparkles if you want, but this is completely optional.

Take care as the mixture may still be very hot

Pour the solution into a glass jar and suspend the lolly stick in the sugar solution, we used a fork to hold it in place. Don’t let the stick touch the bottom or sides of the jar.

You should see crystals start to form after a few days.

Why do sugar crystals form?

A crystal is a solid material with a naturally geometrically regular form. Some take millions of years to form, such as diamonds. The crystals we made above take just a few days.

Most minerals dissolved in water will form crystals given enough time and space. The shape of the crystal formed depends on the mineral’s molecule shape.

In the case of our sugar crystals there are two processes at work.

Evaporation – the water evaporates slowly meaning the solution becomes more saturated, so the sugar molecules come out of solution and collect on the string/wire or stick.

Precipitation – the solution we made was very concentrated which means there was too much solute ( the sugar ) to remain dissolved in the water, therefore it starts to precipitate.

Quick summary – How to make sugar crystals

The sugar crystals form because the water and sugar mixture is supersaturated. This means it contains more sugar than can be dissolved in the amount of water. Imagine lots of tiny sugar molecules moving around the water bumping into each other and sticking to each other. The sugar molecules stick to the lolly stick and pull other sugar molecules towards them.

Top tip for making sugar crystals

If your crystals don’t grow very well, try seeding the lolly stick first by putting some sugar on the end, this will give the crystals something to stick to.

How to grow sugar crystals (3)

More edible science for kids

Here at Science Sparks we love edible experiments! How many of these have you tried?

How to grow sugar crystals (5)

If you liked this, you’ll love my new book Snackable Science which contains 60 exciting edible experiments for kids!

How to grow sugar crystals (7)

Last Updated on October 19, 2020 by Emma Vanstone

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Safety Notice

Science Sparks ( Wild Sparks Enterprises Ltd ) are not liable for the actions of activity of any person who uses the information in this resource or in any of the suggested further resources. Science Sparks assume no liability with regard to injuries or damage to property that may occur as a result of using the information and carrying out the practical activities contained in this resource or in any of the suggested further resources.

These activities are designed to be carried out by children working with a parent, guardian or other appropriate adult. The adult involved is fully responsible for ensuring that the activities are carried out safely.

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How to grow sugar crystals (2024)

FAQs

What is the process of making sugar crystals? ›

A certain amount of sugar solution in a container is heated, after heating threads are put in heated solution then it is cooled suddenly. After the solution is being cooled down, threads along with solid crystals of sugar are taken out. This process is called crystallization.

How much sugar do you need to grow crystals? ›

To grow sugar crystals, you'll need: 6 cups of table sugar. 2 cups of water. A pot to dissolve the sugar.

How do you crystallize sugar? ›

Crystallization takes place in a vacuum boiling pan. Thick juice or syrup is fed to the vacuum pans and evaporated until saturated. Seed crystals are added during a strike to grow sugar crystals. The process is continued until a specified crystal size has been reached.

What makes candy crystals grow? ›

Occasionally when they bump into each other, the molecules end up sticking together; this is the beginning of the crystallization process and is called nucleation. Once several molecules are already stuck together, they actively attract other molecules to join them. This slow process is how the crystal "grows."

Can you make your own sugar crystals? ›

In a saucepan, heat at least three cups of Sugar together with one cup of water. You want to dissolve as much Sugar as possible into the water. While stirring, bring the sugar solution to a boil. Remove the pan from heat and, if you want, add a few drops of food colouring and 1/2 teaspoon of flavouring.

Why did my sugar crystals not grow? ›

No Crystal Growth

This is usually caused by using a solution that isn't saturated. The cure for this is to dissolve more solute into the liquid. Stirring and applying heat can help to get solute into the solution. Keep adding solute until you start to see some accumulate at the bottom of your container.

Which crystals grow faster salt or sugar? ›

The sugar solution is so viscous (thick, syrupy) that it slows down this motion and therefore sugar crystals are harder to grow than salt or borax crystals.

Do sugar crystals grow faster in tap water or distilled water? ›

So, in summary, tap water is more conducive to the growth of sugar crystals due to the presence of impurities that serve as nuclei for crystal formation, resulting in faster and larger crystal growth compared to distilled water.

Does sugar go bad? ›

Shelf life. Commercial sugars (granular, syrup, and honey) have an indefinite shelf life due to their resistance to microbial growth. However, sugars have a best-if-used by date of approximately 2 years for quality concerns.

How is sugar turned into crystals? ›

A supersaturated solution is unstable—it contains more solute (in this case, sugar) than can stay in solution—so as the temperature decreases, the sugar comes out of the solution, forming crystals. The lower the temperature, the more molecules join the sugar crystals, and that is how rock candy is created.

What factors are best to grow sugar crystals? ›

Warm air temperature aids water evaporation, causing the crystals to grow more quickly. Crystals will still grow in cooler temperatures, but it will take much longer for the water to evaporate. Crystal growth also requires light.

How to grow crystals with Epsom salt? ›

Dissolve a tablespoon of Epsom salts in five tablespoons of water and stir until all the salt has dissolved. Pour the solution into a dark coloured dish and leave it on one side to evaporate, preferably in the sunshine. As the water evaporates you'll see a lovely crop of needle-like crystals form.

What is the method of making crystals? ›

  1. Make a supersaturated solution of alum. Do this by adding alum to hot water until no more will dissolve. ...
  2. Pour some of the solution into a shallow evaporating dish and leave in a cool, dark, undisturbed cupboard overnight. ...
  3. Select your seed crystal. ...
  4. Check on the crystal each day.

What is the process of making granulated sugar? ›

To produce granulated sugar, the cane syrup is boiled until crystals form. The mixture of crystals and syrup is spun in a centrifuge to separate the two. Then the crystals of raw sugar are dried with hot air.

How to make sugar crystals experiment step by step? ›

Sugar Crystal Instructions

Place the sugar and water into a pan and heat whilst stirring until the sugar has dissolved ( ask a grown up to help with this part ). Leave the mixture to cool for about 15 minutes. Add a few drops of food colouring or edible sparkles if you want, but this is completely optional.

Is making sugar crystals a chemical change? ›

Crystallization is a physical change by which one substance in a mixture separates itself from the mixture and forms solid, crystalline particles with other molecules of the same substance. If you've ever seen rock candy, or made it at home, you have seen the result of sugar crystallization.

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