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Make a naked egg science experiments Fizzics Education

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Create a naked & bouncy egg

Create a naked & bouncy egg

Follow FizzicsEd 150 Science Experiments:

You Will Need:

  • One Egg
  • A 500mL bottle of clear white vinegar
  • One Drinking Glass
  • Be aware of egg vapour allergies in your class
Written by Fizzics Education.
Reviewed by Ben Newsome CF.

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Create a naked egg science experiment - materials needed
1 Create a naked egg science experiment - egg in a cup

Put the egg into the glass.

2 Create a naked egg science experiment - Create a naked egg science experiment - pouring vinegar over the egg

Pour vinegar into the glass until it completely covers the egg.

3 Egg dissolving in a cup half full of water

Have a look closely at the surface of the eggshell.  You should see it start to be covered in tiny bubbles.

4 Create a naked egg science experiment - Pour vinegar into the glass until it completely covers the egg.

Leave the glass, vinegar and egg overnight where it won’t be touched.

5 Create a naked egg science experiment - Put the egg into the glass.

After about 24 hours has passed, check the egg again. The shell will have started to dissolve.

6 Naked egg without a shell getting held

After a few days (up to a week if you have weaker vinegar), carefully take the egg out of the glass and feel it.  What does it feel like?

VERY carefully drop the egg into a table from about 5cm up. What does the egg do?

NB: If it doesn’t work the first time, change your vinegar and repeat with the same egg… you’ll get there!

7 Fizzics Education working with liquid nitrogen at MAAS for the Sydney Science Festival
8 Teacher showing how to do an experiment outside to a group of kids.

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9 A man pointing at bubbling dry ice beaker and measuring cylinder with coloured liquids inside

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What's going on?

The Science of the Naked and Bouncy Egg

Eggshells are surprisingly strong, made primarily of a mineral compound called Calcium Carbonate (CaCO3). This is the same material found in sea shells and limestone! Vinegar is a diluted form of acetic acid. When you submerge the egg, a chemical reaction occurs between the acid and the base (the shell).

The acid breaks the CaCO3 apart. The calcium dissolves into the liquid, while the carbonate is released as carbon dioxide gas (CO2). Those thousands of tiny bubbles you see on the surface of the egg are literally the shell turning into gas!

CaCO3 + 2CH3COOH → Ca(CH3COO)2 + H2O + CO2

Once the shell is completely dissolved, you are left with a “naked” egg held together only by its thin membrane. This membrane is semi-permeable, meaning it acts like a filter that lets some molecules (like water) pass through while keeping others (like egg proteins) inside. This membrane is quite stretchy, which is why the egg can bounce gently from low heights!

Light shining through a translucent naked egg

The Power of Osmosis

You can use your naked egg to witness osmosis—the movement of water across a membrane from a high concentration to a low concentration:

  • Swelling: Place the egg in pure water. Water molecules will rush into the egg to balance the concentration, making it swell.
  • Shrivelling: Place it in salty water or corn syrup. Because there is more water inside the egg than outside, water flows out, leaving the egg looking deflated.
  • Dyeing: Add food colouring to the water. The dye molecules travel through the membrane, colouring the entire inside of the egg!

Environmental Connection

This experiment highlights the dangers of acid rain. When pollutants make rainwater acidic, it can dissolve the shells of eggs laid by wild birds or the shells of marine creatures. If a bird’s body is too acidic, it can’t form a strong shell in the first place, leading to a collapse in bird populations.

Variables to test

Find out more on variables here.

  • Acid Concentration: Try diluting the vinegar with water. Does a lower pH level slow down the rate of the chemical reaction?
  • Egg Variety: Compare a standard white chicken egg to a brown egg or even a quail egg. Does the shell thickness change how long it takes to become naked?
  • Thermal Energy: Put one experiment in the fridge and leave one on the bench. Higher temperatures usually increase molecular collisions; does the warm egg dissolve faster?

Science Units of Work

âś… Reviewed: April 6, 2026


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Reviewer

This resource was last reviewed for scientific accuracy on April 6, 2026.

Ben Newsome CF is the recipient of the 2023 UTS Chancellor’s Award for Excellence and a Churchill Fellow. He is a global leader in science communication and the founder of Fizzics Education.

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