You will need 1 tablespoon white glue, 1/2 teaspoon borax, 1 tablespoon cornstarch, 2 tablespoons warm water, 2 disposable cups, and 2 stir sticks. Dissolve the borax in the warm water. Mix 1/2 teaspoon of the borax mixture, and all cornstarch to the glue. Allow to stand for 15 seconds, then stir. Remove the mixture and roll in your hands to make a ball. This will be a sticky, but solidifies as it is rolled.
No, borax is something you can add to make goop.
The borax acts as a cross-linking agent that polymerizes the glue molecules, creating a bouncy rubber-like material. The water helps dissolve the borax and distribute it evenly in the glue mixture. When the mixture dries, the cross-linked polymers give the ball its elasticity and bounce.
To make borax bouncy balls at home, you will need borax powder, cornstarch, white glue, warm water, food coloring, and small round molds. Mix 1 tablespoon of warm water with 1/2 teaspoon of borax powder in a small bowl. In a separate bowl, mix 1 tablespoon of cornstarch, 1 tablespoon of white glue, and a few drops of food coloring. Slowly pour the borax mixture into the glue mixture and stir until a ball forms. Remove the ball from the bowl and knead it until it is smooth and bouncy.
To make a borax bouncy ball at home, you will need borax powder, cornstarch, white glue, warm water, food coloring (optional), and small plastic containers. Mix 1 tablespoon of white glue, 1/2 tablespoon of cornstarch, and a few drops of food coloring in a container. In a separate container, mix 1/2 teaspoon of borax powder with 1 tablespoon of warm water until dissolved. Slowly pour the borax mixture into the glue mixture while stirring. Once the mixture starts to clump together, take it out and roll it into a ball. Let it sit for a few minutes to harden before bouncing.
Ingredients: large container 1 cup of water white glue 2 tsp. borax In the container mix the water and borax. Then add the glue. The more glue you add the bigger the glob will be. Stir well. After a minute pick up glob and mush in your hand mixing in any pockets of glue left. If you roll it in a ball you can bounce it on the floor but don't try to bounce it on the carpet, it picks up a lot of lint.
you cant
Borax can act as a cross-linking agent in glue formulations, helping to strengthen the bonds between adhesive molecules. When added to glue, borax can improve the adhesive properties, making the glue more durable and resistant to moisture. However, excessive amounts of borax can also make the glue brittle over time.
you take borax ( in the cleaning aisle ), water and glue to make goo. it doesnt matter how much of anything you put in. if you want wet, sloppy goo, you put in water, glue and very little borax. if you want just molding goo, put in water, glue, and a lot of borax
you could get cornstarch i think
When glue is mixed with borax, a cross-linking reaction occurs between the polyvinyl acetate molecules in the glue and the borate ions in the borax. This creates a network of long chains that trap water molecules, giving slime its unique stretchy and gooey texture.
Glue contains polymers that give it flexibility and stickiness. When borax is added to the glue, it reacts with the polymers to create cross-links, forming a stretchy and moldable material known as silly putty.
The PVA in white glue reacts with borax and water to make super slime.