Why Does Hydrogen Peroxide Foam When You Put It On A Cut?
Maybe your like
- Science
- Tech
- Home & Garden
- Auto
- Culture
- Health
- Money
- Animals
- Lifestyle
- Entertainment
- Quizzes
Advertisement
HowStuffWorks Science Innovation Science Questions Why Does Hydrogen Peroxide Bubble When You Put It on a Cut? By: Yara Simón | Updated: Sep 20, 2023- Share Content on Facebook
- Share Content on LinkedIn
- Share Content on Flipboard
- Share Content on Reddit
- Share Content via Email
Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is a common bleaching agent that you can buy at the drugstore. What you are buying is a 3 percent solution, meaning the bottle contains 97 percent water and 3 percent hydrogen peroxide. Most people use it as an antiseptic.
It turns out that hydrogen peroxide is not very good as an antiseptic, but it is not bad for washing cuts and scrapes, and the foaming looks cool. So why does hydrogen peroxide bubble? Let's dive into the science behind the foamy display.
Advertisement
Contents- What Is Hydrogen Peroxide?
- Explaining the Hydrogen Peroxide Fizz
- Why Doesn't Hydrogen Peroxide Bubble in the Bottle?
What Is Hydrogen Peroxide?
At its core, hydrogen peroxide is a simple chemical compound with a not-so-simple chemical formula: H2O2. This formula reveals that two hydrogen atoms (H) and two oxygen atoms (O) make up hydrogen peroxide.
Advertisement
Explaining the Hydrogen Peroxide Fizz
It foams is because blood and cells contain an enzyme called catalase. Since a cut or scrape contains both blood and damaged cells, there is lots of catalase floating around.
When the catalase comes in contact with hydrogen peroxide, it turns the hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) into water (H2O) and oxygen gas (O2).
Advertisement
Catalase does this extremely efficiently — up to 200,000 reactions per second. Hydrogen peroxide forms bubbles, which is pure oxygen bubbles being created by the catalase.
Pour hydrogen peroxide on a cut potato, and it will do the same thing for the same reason: Catalase in the damaged potato cells reacts with the hydrogen peroxide.
Advertisement
Why Doesn't Hydrogen Peroxide Bubble in the Bottle?
Hydrogen peroxide bubbles do not happen in the bottle or on healthy cells because there is no catalase to help the reaction occur. Hydrogen peroxide is stable at room temperature.
This article was updated in conjunction with AI technology, then fact-checked and edited by a HowStuffWorks editor.
Advertisement
Lots More Information
Related HowStuffWorks Articles
- How Cells Work
- How Blood Works
- Can you make a rocket engine using hydrogen peroxide and silver?
- How Artificial Blood Works
- How Your Immune System Works
More Great Links
- The many benefits of hydrogen peroxide
- Hydrogen peroxide environmental uses
Cite This!Please copy/paste the following text to properly cite this HowStuffWorks.com article:
Copy Yara Simón "Why Does Hydrogen Peroxide Bubble When You Put It on a Cut?" 1 January 1970.HowStuffWorks.com. <https://science.howstuffworks.com/innovation/science-questions/question115.htm> 17 February 2026 Close Citation More Awesome StuffAdvertisement
Advertisement
Loading...Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Tag » What Makes Hydrogen Peroxide Bubble
-
Why Does Hydrogen Peroxide Foam? | Homage Essentials & Co
-
Why Does Hydrogen Peroxide Bubble On A Cut? - ThoughtCo
-
Why Does Hydrogen Peroxide Fizz On Cuts? - Live Science
-
Should You Use Hydrogen Peroxide To Clean Cuts And Scrapes?
-
Why Does Hydrogen Peroxide Bubble On A Cut? - Science Notes
-
Why Does Hydrogen Peroxide Bubble Up? - Quora
-
What Are Those Bubbles That Form When You Pour Hydrogen Peroxide ...
-
How Hydrogen Peroxide Works By 45 Urgent Care PC In Jackson
-
What Substances Besides Blood Will Make Peroxide Bubble/foam?
-
Hydrogen Peroxide: The Body's Best Defence System - McGill University
-
Growth And Detachment Of Oxygen Bubbles Induced By Gold ...
-
Make Elephant Toothpaste - Scientific American
-
Mini Spheres Perform Feats Of Strength With Bubble Power - Nature
-
Why Does Hydrogen Peroxide Foam On Our Wounds? - Science ABC