Soap Bubble Wiki
(add section about thickness of films in terms of molecules)
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The colors of a soap film provide a precise measurement of the film's thickness. The relationship between the colors of a soap film have been well known for more than a century. In fact, these colors provided important evidence in confirming the [https://skullsinthestars.com/2012/05/16/the-secret-molecular-life-of-soap-bubbles-1913/ molecular theory of matter]. The color charts on this page mapping color to thickness were prepared by a German mathematician based on well-known and uncontroversial techniques.
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Familiarity with the colors and the thicknesses that they represent is beneficial for soap bubble lovers and provide insights that will make you a better bubble maker and bubble juice brewer.
 
Soap bubbles have very thin walls. The range can be anywhere from 10 nanometers at the top of a thin-walled bubble to over 1000 nanometers. By contrast, human hair's thickness range is on the order of 40,000 to 60,000 nanometers. According to a [https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/soapbubblefanciers/conversations/messages/17942 post on SBF] soap films may be as few as a few soap molecules thick.
 
Soap bubbles have very thin walls. The range can be anywhere from 10 nanometers at the top of a thin-walled bubble to over 1000 nanometers. By contrast, human hair's thickness range is on the order of 40,000 to 60,000 nanometers. According to a [https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/soapbubblefanciers/conversations/messages/17942 post on SBF] soap films may be as few as a few soap molecules thick.
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The chart below shows the colors of a soap film and the associated thickness (a vertical-oriented version of this chart is provided at the bottom of the page):
 
[[File:The-colors-of-a-soap-film.jpg|thumb|left|600px|Created by Bjorn of seifenblasenmann.de and used with his permission]]
 
{{ClearFloat}}
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(June 2017: we are in the process of improving this page.)
   
 
A bubble's colors are caused by a phenomenon known as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thin-film_interference Thin-film Interference]. When light bounces off of a soap film, there are reflections from both the front and back of the film that reach the eye. Interaction between these reflections cause the colors that we see. The colors are directly related to the film thickness (as well as light color and lighting angle). You can accurately gauge the thickness of a bubble's walls by examining its colors.
 
A bubble's colors are caused by a phenomenon known as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thin-film_interference Thin-film Interference]. When light bounces off of a soap film, there are reflections from both the front and back of the film that reach the eye. Interaction between these reflections cause the colors that we see. The colors are directly related to the film thickness (as well as light color and lighting angle). You can accurately gauge the thickness of a bubble's walls by examining its colors.
   
[[File:20150130_8355_guar20to1_old.jpg|thumb|left|320px|20:1 Dawn Pro Juice (with guar gum)]][[File:20150130_8356_addDetergent_andoldBLMmix.jpg|thumb|right|320px|After adding unknown amount of detergent -- moments after the previous bubbles was made.]]
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[[File:20150130_8355_guar20to1_old.jpg|thumb|left|320px|20:1 Dawn Pro Juice (with guar gum)]][[File:20150130_8356_addDetergent_andoldBLMmix.jpg|thumb|right|320px|After adding unknown amount of detergent -- moments after the previous bubbles was made.]]{{ClearFloat}}
The color differences between the bubbles above is solely due to the amount of detergent. See this [[User_blog:Espiegel123/2015_01_31_Quick_Demo_of_How_Detergent_Amount_Influences_Color_Profile|blog post]].{{ClearFloat}}
 
   
 
The color differences between the bubbles above are solely due to the amount of detergent. Detergent concentration has a profound influence on the film thicness as discussed in [[Dilution]]. See this [[User_blog:Espiegel123/2015_01_31_Quick_Demo_of_How_Detergent_Amount_Influences_Color_Profile|blog post for details]].
Due to the influence of gravity, a soap bubble's walls are thinnest at the top (as the solution is drawn downward by gravity) and thickest at the bottom which results in the variety of colors that we see. As a bubble is tossed and turned by the wind, there will be a disruption of the gradual progression from thin film to thick film.
 
   
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'''Become familiar with the colors associated with thin and thick films'''. It is valuable to be able to recognize the colors associated with thick and thin films. Take a look at the chart near the top of this page that maps color to film thickness. The numbers on the chart indicate the film thickness in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanometre nanometers]. When the film is very thin (the far left edge of the chart), it is so thin that it film reflects no light and is often called the "black film". Against dark background, the buble will be virtually invisible. As you move to the right, you see the colors associated with increasingly thick films. Notice that yellow and blue colors only appear in films that are thinner than about 600 nanometers. Films thicker than 600 nm  are dominated by increasingly dull-looking shades of green and pink. Watch the videos below to observe the progression of colors.
The chart below was prepared by a [http://www.seifenblasenmann.de scientist] to map bubble colors to film thickness :
 
[[File:The-colors-of-a-soap-film.jpg|thumb|left|600px|Created by Bjorn of seifenblasenmann.de and used with his permission]]
 
{{ClearFloat}}
 
   
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Due to the influence of gravity, a stable soap bubble's walls are thinnest at the top and thickest at the bottom. The normal order of things may be temporarily disrupted if a bubble is turned or flipped by the wind or a performer, but will be restored when the bubble stops moving. When a bubble is initially blown, it may take a little while for the bubble to stabilize. You will see swirls and eddies as the bubble stabilizes.
Notice that as the film becomes the thicker it becomes dominated by increasingly dull-looking shades of green and pink. Yellows blues only appear in the thinner range of the film.
 
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As a bubble ages, evaporation and gravity will cause the film to become thinner and thinner causing the colors to shift. If the air is clean and the air still, you may see the bubble thin so much that it no longer reflects light and seems to disappear (the so-called "black film" stage). Watch the videos below to see this in action. The time-lapse video on the left below shows the thinning of a bubble that starts out with a relatively thick film and thins considerably. The video on the right shows a thinner-filmed bubble thinning all the way to the black film stage.
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[[File:DRAFT time lapse of thick-filmed bubble as it thins|thumb|left|320px]][[File:Bubble Profile Test - Mr Bubbles|thumb|right|320px]]{{ClearFloat}}
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[[File:Bubble Color Fade Demo (Solution 0620B5)|thumb|right|320px]]
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{{ClearFloat}}
   
 
The film's colors provide information that has practical applications. Careful observation of the colors as a bubble forms can help a bubbler determine when the film is thinning out, indicating that it is time to close a bubble. A bubble juice chef can observe the color profile bubbles and adjust the dilution to achieve a desired film thickness (since dilution influences soap film thickness).
 
The film's colors provide information that has practical applications. Careful observation of the colors as a bubble forms can help a bubbler determine when the film is thinning out, indicating that it is time to close a bubble. A bubble juice chef can observe the color profile bubbles and adjust the dilution to achieve a desired film thickness (since dilution influences soap film thickness).
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The color information can be used to tune your bubble juice in the field to a particular film thickness. Thin films can be useful for maximizing size potential (in some situations), and thick films can be useful for extending bubble life.
 
The color information can be used to tune your bubble juice in the field to a particular film thickness. Thin films can be useful for maximizing size potential (in some situations), and thick films can be useful for extending bubble life.
   
See the [[Dawn Pro Dilution Evaluation]] to see an evaluation of the film thickness caused by different dilutions of [[Dawn Manual Pot and Pan|Dawn Pro]] dishwashing liquid.
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See the article [[Dawn Pro Dilution Evaluation]] to see the [[Color Profile|color profiles]] that result from different dilutions of [[Dawn Manual Pot and Pan|Dawn Pro]] dishwashing liquid.
   
 
[[File:2012_04_07_thommy_illustration.jpg|thumb|600px|left|At left, Bjorn's chart which was generated by theory. Right, a bubble dome section illustrating. Photo by Thomas Poersch.]]{{ClearFloat}}
 
[[File:2012_04_07_thommy_illustration.jpg|thumb|600px|left|At left, Bjorn's chart which was generated by theory. Right, a bubble dome section illustrating. Photo by Thomas Poersch.]]{{ClearFloat}}
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==Dilution and Color==
 
==Dilution and Color==
 
[[Dilution]] can have a big impact on bubble colors because of the way that dilution influences the soap film thickness. These color variations are especially noticeable with medium and big bubbles. They are harder to see with small bubbles. Soap dilution has some unusual properties. Read more about it in the [[Dilution]] article.
 
[[Dilution]] can have a big impact on bubble colors because of the way that dilution influences the soap film thickness. These color variations are especially noticeable with medium and big bubbles. They are harder to see with small bubbles. Soap dilution has some unusual properties. Read more about it in the [[Dilution]] article.
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[[File:DRAFT time lapse of thick-filmed bubble as it thins|thumb|right|335 px]]This timelapse video shows a bubble made with a pH-adjusted 40:1 mix of Dawn Pro and water as its film thins. It should help you get an idea of which colors are associated with which thicknesses.
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Notice how the bubble starts with only pink and green colors. These are associated with thick-ish soap films. Yellows and belows only appear as the bubble thins.{{ClearFloat}}
   
 
[[File:20130802_5166_48to1CROP.jpg|thumb|left|300px|48:1. Dawn Pro at 48:1 (water:detergent) with Edward's longevity test setup]][[File:20130802_5175CROP8to1.jpg|thumb|300px|8:1. Dawn Pro at 8:1 (water:detergent) with Edward's longevity test setup]]
 
[[File:20130802_5166_48to1CROP.jpg|thumb|left|300px|48:1. Dawn Pro at 48:1 (water:detergent) with Edward's longevity test setup]][[File:20130802_5175CROP8to1.jpg|thumb|300px|8:1. Dawn Pro at 8:1 (water:detergent) with Edward's longevity test setup]]
 
{{ClearFloat}}
 
{{ClearFloat}}
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===Demonstration===
In the pictures below, pay close attention to the colors at the tops of the bubbles. These color profiles are consistent across bubble sessions as long as the lighting is similar. The difference between the 24:1 and 19:1 is fairly subtle. The difference between the 19:1 and 16:1 bubble are quite pronounced despite the much smaller difference in concentration. Changes in concentration have relatively small impacts when the concentration rises above the [[Critical Micelle Concentration]] (or CMC). For Dawn Pro, the CMC is somewhere around 19:1. The turquoise and yellow that appear at the top of the 24:1 and 19:12 bubbles are found at about the mid-line of the 16:1 bubble indicating a much thinner film for the 16:1 bubbles. 
 
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[[File:2015 01 Super Giant Bubble Color and Dilution Demo-1|thumb|330x330px]]
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This video demonstrations the profound affect that dilution has on film thickness and color.{{ClearFloat}}
 
In the pictures below, pay close attention to the colors at the tops of the bubbles. These color profiles are consistent across bubble sessions as long as the lighting is similar. The difference between the 24:1 and 19:1 is fairly subtle. The difference between the 19:1 and 16:1 bubble are quite pronounced despite the much smaller difference in concentration. Changes in concentration have relatively small impacts when the concentration rises above the [[Critical Dilution]]. For Dawn Pro, the Critical Dilution seems to be somewhere between 16:1 and 18:1. The turquoise and yellow that appear at the top of the 24:1 and 19:12 bubbles are found at about the mid-line of the 16:1 bubble indicating a much thinner film for the 16:1 bubbles. 
 
[[File:20120323_45ishto1_1.png|thumb|left|300px|45:1. Rose and green dominate when the water:detergent ratio is high. This bubble was made with Dawn Pro at a dilution of about 45:1 (water:detergent).]][[File:C_20121125_3341_HEC_24to1.png|thumb|right|300px|24:1. The color profile of this bubble includes broad range of colors not visible in the Dawn Pro 45:1 dilution. This bubble was created with bubble juice that has a 24:1 Water:Dawn Pro ratio]]
 
[[File:20120323_45ishto1_1.png|thumb|left|300px|45:1. Rose and green dominate when the water:detergent ratio is high. This bubble was made with Dawn Pro at a dilution of about 45:1 (water:detergent).]][[File:C_20121125_3341_HEC_24to1.png|thumb|right|300px|24:1. The color profile of this bubble includes broad range of colors not visible in the Dawn Pro 45:1 dilution. This bubble was created with bubble juice that has a 24:1 Water:Dawn Pro ratio]]
 
[[File:C_20121125_3341_HEC_19to1_3.png|thumb|left|300px|19:1. HEC mix.]][[File:N_20121125_3341_HEC_16to1_18.png|thumb|300px|16:1. HEC mix.]]
 
[[File:C_20121125_3341_HEC_19to1_3.png|thumb|left|300px|19:1. HEC mix.]][[File:N_20121125_3341_HEC_16to1_18.png|thumb|300px|16:1. HEC mix.]]
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{{ClearFloat}}
 
{{ClearFloat}}
   
'''Very very dilute''' solutions create very thick films may even be colorless and glossy -- as opposed to very very thin film that are colorless, glossless, and almost invisible. '''Very dilute solutions''' (where the surfactant concentration is low) have '''thick''' films that result in films dominated by shades of green and red. '''As the dilution becomes less extreme''', the greens, reds, and pinks become more saturated, and more purples, yellows, and blues start to appear. Once the [[Critical Micelle Concentration]] (CMC), has been reached, further increases in concentration have decreasing impact on the surface tension, film thickness and color.
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'''Very very dilute''' solutions create very thick films may even be colorless and glossy -- as opposed to very very thin film that are colorless, glossless, and almost invisible. '''Very dilute solutions''' (where the surfactant concentration is low) have '''thick''' films that result in films dominated by shades of green and red. '''As the dilution becomes less extreme''', the greens, reds, and pinks become more saturated, and more purples, yellows, and blues start to appear. Once the [[Critical Micelle Concentration]] (CMC), has been reached, further increases in concentration have decreasing impact on the surface tension, film thickness and color. (EDITOR: clean up confusion about CMC as CMC and critical dilution may be different).
   
 
These color changes are related to changes in the solution surface tension. Due to the way that surfactants work, these changes occur primarily in the neighborhood of the CMC.
 
These color changes are related to changes in the solution surface tension. Due to the way that surfactants work, these changes occur primarily in the neighborhood of the CMC.
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== Soap Films And Molecules ==
 
== Soap Films And Molecules ==
As explained in [http://skullsinthestars.com/2012/05/16/the-secret-molecular-life-of-soap-bubbles-1913/ The Secret Molecular Life of Bubbles], it is explained how the colors of a soap film were used as evidence in establishing the that matter is made up of discrete particles. It is a fascinating article that we highly recommend.
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The colors of a soap film were important evidence in establishing atomic theory of matter. The wonderful [http://skullsinthestars.com/2012/05/16/the-secret-molecular-life-of-soap-bubbles-1913/ The Secret Molecular Life of Bubbles] explains how the colors of a soap film were used as evidence in establishing the that matter is made up of discrete particles. It is a fascinating article that we highly recommend.
   
'''How many molecules thick is a soap film?''' Since molecules are not either cubes or spheres, the question can be precisely answered. There seems to be some consensus that you can treat soap molecules as being on the order of 4.5 nanometers thick and water water molecules as being contained by a cube roughly 0.278 nanometers per side. With these estimates, we find that the amber color at the top of the color chart indicatesa film about 150 nanometers thick. This would be 33 soap molecules thick or about 540 water molecules thick. The "black film" (a thickness less than 25 nanometers) is less than 6 soap molecules or 90 water molecules thick. The turquoise typical of the top of a newly-formed bubble made with a 24:1 Dawn Pro dilution is about 270 nanometers thick or almost 1000 water molecules thick. You can see why on a warm dry day, it can be useful to have a thicker film.
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'''How many molecules thick is a soap film?''' Since molecules are not either cubes or spheres, the question cannot be precisely answered. There seems to be some consensus that you can treat soap molecules as being on the order of 4.5 nanometers thick and water molecules as being contained by a cube roughly 0.278 nanometers per side. With these estimates, we find that the amber color at the top of the color chart which indicates a film about 150 nanometers thick would be 33 soap molecules 540 water molecules thick. The "black film" (a thickness less than 25 nanometers) is less than 6 soap molecules or 90 water molecules thick. The turquoise typical of the top of a newly-formed bubble made with a 24:1 [[Dawn Pro Dilution Evaluation|Dawn Pro dilution]] is about 270 nanometers thick or almost 1000 water molecules thick. You can see why on a warm dry day, it can be useful to have a thicker film.
   
 
The surfactant molecules in modern detergents may be larger than this.
 
The surfactant molecules in modern detergents may be larger than this.
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==More==
 
==More==
 
'''A note about the color chart'''. If you do research, you will find a few charts which map color to thickness. There is some small disagreements between the different available charts due to slightly different assumptions about the parameters such as index of refraction, viewing angle, etc.
 
'''A note about the color chart'''. If you do research, you will find a few charts which map color to thickness. There is some small disagreements between the different available charts due to slightly different assumptions about the parameters such as index of refraction, viewing angle, etc.
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[[File:The-colors-of-a-soap-film-upto-800nm_vertical.png|thumb|left]]'''Vertical color chart'''. Vertically-oriented color chart with some helpful markings.
 
[[File:The-colors-of-a-soap-film-upto-800nm_vertical.png|thumb|left]]'''Vertical color chart'''. Vertically-oriented color chart with some helpful markings.
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{{ClearFloat}}
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==SEE ALSO==
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There are many articles and videos on the web that illustrate, explain, or discuss the physics of bubble colors. Here are a few:
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*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4I34jA1fDp4 Thin Film Interference Pt. 1] - Beautiful video of a soap film thinning.
  +
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IUIurv5L_mM The Colour of Soap Bubbles] (illustrated physics lecture on YouTube). This lecture is a bit dry but interesting.
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{{stub}}
 
{{stub}}

Revision as of 16:58, 15 August 2017

The colors of a soap film provide a precise measurement of the film's thickness. The relationship between the colors of a soap film have been well known for more than a century. In fact, these colors provided important evidence in confirming the molecular theory of matter. The color charts on this page mapping color to thickness were prepared by a German mathematician based on well-known and uncontroversial techniques.

Familiarity with the colors and the thicknesses that they represent is beneficial for soap bubble lovers and provide insights that will make you a better bubble maker and bubble juice brewer. Soap bubbles have very thin walls. The range can be anywhere from 10 nanometers at the top of a thin-walled bubble to over 1000 nanometers. By contrast, human hair's thickness range is on the order of 40,000 to 60,000 nanometers. According to a post on SBF soap films may be as few as a few soap molecules thick.

The chart below shows the colors of a soap film and the associated thickness (a vertical-oriented version of this chart is provided at the bottom of the page):

The-colors-of-a-soap-film

Created by Bjorn of seifenblasenmann.de and used with his permission

 

(June 2017: we are in the process of improving this page.)

A bubble's colors are caused by a phenomenon known as Thin-film Interference. When light bounces off of a soap film, there are reflections from both the front and back of the film that reach the eye. Interaction between these reflections cause the colors that we see. The colors are directly related to the film thickness (as well as light color and lighting angle). You can accurately gauge the thickness of a bubble's walls by examining its colors.

20150130 8355 guar20to1 old

20:1 Dawn Pro Juice (with guar gum)

20150130 8356 addDetergent andoldBLMmix

After adding unknown amount of detergent -- moments after the previous bubbles was made.

 

The color differences between the bubbles above are solely due to the amount of detergent. Detergent concentration has a profound influence on the film thicness as discussed in Dilution. See this blog post for details.

Become familiar with the colors associated with thin and thick films. It is valuable to be able to recognize the colors associated with thick and thin films. Take a look at the chart near the top of this page that maps color to film thickness. The numbers on the chart indicate the film thickness in nanometers. When the film is very thin (the far left edge of the chart), it is so thin that it film reflects no light and is often called the "black film". Against dark background, the buble will be virtually invisible. As you move to the right, you see the colors associated with increasingly thick films. Notice that yellow and blue colors only appear in films that are thinner than about 600 nanometers. Films thicker than 600 nm  are dominated by increasingly dull-looking shades of green and pink. Watch the videos below to observe the progression of colors.

Due to the influence of gravity, a stable soap bubble's walls are thinnest at the top and thickest at the bottom. The normal order of things may be temporarily disrupted if a bubble is turned or flipped by the wind or a performer, but will be restored when the bubble stops moving. When a bubble is initially blown, it may take a little while for the bubble to stabilize. You will see swirls and eddies as the bubble stabilizes.

As a bubble ages, evaporation and gravity will cause the film to become thinner and thinner causing the colors to shift. If the air is clean and the air still, you may see the bubble thin so much that it no longer reflects light and seems to disappear (the so-called "black film" stage). Watch the videos below to see this in action. The time-lapse video on the left below shows the thinning of a bubble that starts out with a relatively thick film and thins considerably. The video on the right shows a thinner-filmed bubble thinning all the way to the black film stage.

DRAFT_time_lapse_of_thick-filmed_bubble_as_it_thins

DRAFT time lapse of thick-filmed bubble as it thins

Bubble_Profile_Test_-_Mr_Bubbles

Bubble Profile Test - Mr Bubbles

 
Bubble_Color_Fade_Demo_(Solution_0620B5)

Bubble Color Fade Demo (Solution 0620B5)

 

The film's colors provide information that has practical applications. Careful observation of the colors as a bubble forms can help a bubbler determine when the film is thinning out, indicating that it is time to close a bubble. A bubble juice chef can observe the color profile bubbles and adjust the dilution to achieve a desired film thickness (since dilution influences soap film thickness).

The colors are useful in determing the effective dilution range for a particular detergent. When there is relatively little surfactant, the soap film will be very thick because the surface tension will be high. Such films will be dominated by pink and green. With increasing detergent concentration, the soap film becomes thinner producing the colors seen on the left portion of the chart. Once you reach a particular concentration called the critical micelle concentration adding more detergent has relatively little impact on the film thickness and surface tension. (JAN 2015 NOTE: There has been a question raised on SBF as to whether or not the changes in film thickness are the result of surface tension changes. There seems no question that film thickness varies with dilution but the cause may not be a change in surface tension as it has been proposed that the Critical Micelle Concentration and Critical Dilution are very different.)

The color information can be used to tune your bubble juice in the field to a particular film thickness. Thin films can be useful for maximizing size potential (in some situations), and thick films can be useful for extending bubble life.

See the article Dawn Pro Dilution Evaluation to see the color profiles that result from different dilutions of Dawn Pro dishwashing liquid.

2012 04 07 thommy illustration

At left, Bjorn's chart which was generated by theory. Right, a bubble dome section illustrating. Photo by Thomas Poersch.

 
Thommy dome for soapfilmthickness IMG 0966

Bubble dome picture by Thommy which demonstrates the progression of colors nicely.

 

Dilution and Color

Dilution can have a big impact on bubble colors because of the way that dilution influences the soap film thickness. These color variations are especially noticeable with medium and big bubbles. They are harder to see with small bubbles. Soap dilution has some unusual properties. Read more about it in the Dilution article.

DRAFT_time_lapse_of_thick-filmed_bubble_as_it_thins

DRAFT time lapse of thick-filmed bubble as it thins

This timelapse video shows a bubble made with a pH-adjusted 40:1 mix of Dawn Pro and water as its film thins. It should help you get an idea of which colors are associated with which thicknesses. Notice how the bubble starts with only pink and green colors. These are associated with thick-ish soap films. Yellows and belows only appear as the bubble thins.

 
20130802 5166 48to1CROP

48:1. Dawn Pro at 48:1 (water:detergent) with Edward's longevity test setup

20130802 5175CROP8to1

8:1. Dawn Pro at 8:1 (water:detergent) with Edward's longevity test setup

 

Demonstration

2015_01_Super_Giant_Bubble_Color_and_Dilution_Demo-1

2015 01 Super Giant Bubble Color and Dilution Demo-1

This video demonstrations the profound affect that dilution has on film thickness and color.

 

In the pictures below, pay close attention to the colors at the tops of the bubbles. These color profiles are consistent across bubble sessions as long as the lighting is similar. The difference between the 24:1 and 19:1 is fairly subtle. The difference between the 19:1 and 16:1 bubble are quite pronounced despite the much smaller difference in concentration. Changes in concentration have relatively small impacts when the concentration rises above the Critical Dilution. For Dawn Pro, the Critical Dilution seems to be somewhere between 16:1 and 18:1. The turquoise and yellow that appear at the top of the 24:1 and 19:12 bubbles are found at about the mid-line of the 16:1 bubble indicating a much thinner film for the 16:1 bubbles. 

20120323 45ishto1 1

45:1. Rose and green dominate when the water:detergent ratio is high. This bubble was made with Dawn Pro at a dilution of about 45:1 (water:detergent).

C 20121125 3341 HEC 24to1

24:1. The color profile of this bubble includes broad range of colors not visible in the Dawn Pro 45:1 dilution. This bubble was created with bubble juice that has a 24:1 Water:Dawn Pro ratio

C 20121125 3341 HEC 19to1 3

19:1. HEC mix.

N 20121125 3341 HEC 16to1 18

16:1. HEC mix.

20130812 5267 classic 6

Tube with 'Classic' Charmy Juice similar to Dawn Pro at dilutions below 13:1

20130812 5267 classic 5

Charmy 'Classic' similar to Dawn Pro at dilutions below 13:1 -- notice the large portion of the tube that is light amber indicating a very thin film

 

Very very dilute solutions create very thick films may even be colorless and glossy -- as opposed to very very thin film that are colorless, glossless, and almost invisible. Very dilute solutions (where the surfactant concentration is low) have thick films that result in films dominated by shades of green and red. As the dilution becomes less extreme, the greens, reds, and pinks become more saturated, and more purples, yellows, and blues start to appear. Once the Critical Micelle Concentration (CMC), has been reached, further increases in concentration have decreasing impact on the surface tension, film thickness and color. (EDITOR: clean up confusion about CMC as CMC and critical dilution may be different).

These color changes are related to changes in the solution surface tension. Due to the way that surfactants work, these changes occur primarily in the neighborhood of the CMC. The dilution ratios where this occurs varies (sometimes considerably) from detergent to detergent. The CMC (or at least the surface tension at a given dilution) seems to be influenced by the pH for some detergents (such as Charmy Dish Detergent ).

The images below are of similar-sized bubbles created with PEO-based bubble juice whose only difference was the soap dilution. Note how each dilution has a somewhat different color profile: 

 

For a detailed analysis of Dawn Pro by dilution, see the article See Dawn Pro Dilution Evaluation.

More Examples

20120328 50to1 rayon 2plybottom1

Note the pink/green shades typical of very dilute solutions.

 

See also: blog entry that compares HEC giants with dilutions from 16:1 to 24:1.

Thank you to Bjorn of Seifenblasenmann.defor the use of his chart.

Index of Refraction

Some question has been raised as to whether the assumptions about the relationship between color and film thickness are influenced by the components of the bubble juice. A physicist specializing in optics gave some thought to the problem and expressed confidence that the difference in the index of refraction of mixes would not vary enough to have significant impact on the relationship.

Soap Films And Molecules

The colors of a soap film were important evidence in establishing atomic theory of matter. The wonderful The Secret Molecular Life of Bubbles explains how the colors of a soap film were used as evidence in establishing the that matter is made up of discrete particles. It is a fascinating article that we highly recommend.

How many molecules thick is a soap film? Since molecules are not either cubes or spheres, the question cannot be precisely answered. There seems to be some consensus that you can treat soap molecules as being on the order of 4.5 nanometers thick and water molecules as being contained by a cube roughly 0.278 nanometers per side. With these estimates, we find that the amber color at the top of the color chart which indicates a film about 150 nanometers thick would be 33 soap molecules 540 water molecules thick. The "black film" (a thickness less than 25 nanometers) is less than 6 soap molecules or 90 water molecules thick. The turquoise typical of the top of a newly-formed bubble made with a 24:1 Dawn Pro dilution is about 270 nanometers thick or almost 1000 water molecules thick. You can see why on a warm dry day, it can be useful to have a thicker film.

The surfactant molecules in modern detergents may be larger than this.

More

A note about the color chart. If you do research, you will find a few charts which map color to thickness. There is some small disagreements between the different available charts due to slightly different assumptions about the parameters such as index of refraction, viewing angle, etc.

Dawn Pro Color and Dilution Evaluation. Click here to see an evaluation of Dawn Pro and the color profiles at different dilutions.

The-colors-of-a-soap-film-upto-800nm vertical

Vertical color chart. Vertically-oriented color chart with some helpful markings.

 

SEE ALSO

There are many articles and videos on the web that illustrate, explain, or discuss the physics of bubble colors. Here are a few: