Aluminum foil is made by squishing and stretching a big piece of aluminum until it becomes thin and bendy like paper.
The Big Aluminum Sheet
Squishing and Stretching
Then, the soft aluminum goes through a machine that presses it down really hard, this is called rolling. It’s like when you press a ball of playdough between your hands to make it flat. But instead of just pressing once, the aluminum goes through many layers of rollers, each time getting thinner and thinner.
After rolling, the foil might be stretched out even more to make it really thin, almost as light as a feather! Now you have aluminum foil, ready to wrap sandwiches or keep food fresh in the fridge.
Examples
- A child learns that aluminum foil is made from rocks by heating and rolling them into thin sheets.
- A simple explanation of how bauxite becomes a shiny, bendable sheet used in cooking.
- A basic overview showing the steps from raw material to finished product.
Ask a question
See also
- Aluminium | How Do You Make It?
- How Do Artworks Last for Thousands of Years? | #MetKids Microscope?
- How Does Alloys: Types and Examples Work?
- How Does Cryolite - The Crystal of Surrender Work?
- How Does Aluminium - The Material That Changed The World Work?