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Letter 17976
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Trevor Crichton |
I tried ammonia to see for myself, and I found it completely ineffective, Melissa. But part of the problem with this question is what do we mean by 'cleansing'? Most students mean 'removing tarnish', the brown color on pennies. But if you mean 'removing dirt, oil & grease, and fingerprints,, then you are right. Ammonia is a good cleanser, it's just not a good copper tarnish remover.
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Third of three simultaneous responses -- ++
I'm doing a project on cleaning pennies. I know for a fact that vinegar and solt can clean pennies.
Shewnsey
- Chicago, IL, United States
I recently conducted an experiment and found ammonia to clean pennies much more effective than vinegar. Can anyone explain the chemical reaction of copeer oxide and ammonia? (CuO + NH3, I think?) and why a weak base was more effective? I'm puzzled.
Beau O.
- Austin, Texas
Ed. note: We are drowning under variations on this question
alhough we've already answered similar questions hundreds of times.
Students please search the site for those similar letters or read our
F.A.Q. on the subject ; good
luck.

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