Hi J.O.L.T88,
I hope I can help you out with some of your questions. For the first one, I thought that maybe rephrasing the directions for simple conductance sensor because sometimes that can be helpful. So I'm taking the directions from
https://www.sciencebuddies.org/science- ... p053.shtml.
1. cut two pieces of copper wire (6 inches long)
2. cut a one inch piece of plastic tubing
3. On one end of the plastic tubing wrap one piece of copper wire several times around the tube (like you are winding a yo-yo or something). Leave about 2 inches unwound because you will need to connect it to the battery.
4. Do step 3 again on the other side of the plastic tube and make sure the two pieces of copper wire don't touch.
5. Connect your battery to the battery clip... the battery clip should fit over the end of the battery and have two wires coming out, usually a red one and a black one
6. So here's probably part of the problem. The picture that is on the website isn't the same as the directions so let me see if I can explain it better. Take one of the copper wires and attach an alligator clip to it. The other end of the alligator clip should be connected to the positive terminal of the battery (this should be the red wire or have a positive symbol on the end of the battery). Attach the other copper wire to an alligator clip and then attach the other end to the black terminal on the multimeter. Take another alligator clip and attach it to the other wire on the battery clip and then attach it to the red terminal on the multimeter. So now you should have a closed circuit. It should look similar to figure 2 in the directions... just don't pay attention to the positive and negative signs. There is additional information on the forum that talks about problems that other people have had with this step. If you want to look at those responses just type in "electrolyte challenge" in the search engine at the top of the page.
For your other questions...you dip your sensor in distilled water three times before changing from OJ to sports drink because you want to get all of the ions off of your sensor. So the ions that are present in the solutions cause the conductivity of the solution. After you take the sensor out of the solution there will still be some ions stuck on the surface. If you wash it in distilled water then it washes away all of the ions and when you dip them in the other solution you won't contaminate it. You wash it three times because when you wash you only get about 90% of the ions off with one wash, so you can be pretty sure that you will get almost all of it off if you wash three times. So to make sure your experiment is more accurate, I would change your distilled water after you wash your sensor.
Hope this is helpful
tzforbes