If you want to replicate the hypothesised origin of life on Earth, you need to replicate the conditions on Earth at the appropriate time. As was said previously, surface conditions were very different from conditions on Earth today (e.g. carbon dioxide, methane, & ammonia atmosphere with no oxygen, widespread hydrothermal activity).
There are a variety of early Earth environments where it has been hypothesised life might have arisen, including coastal shallows and/or tidal pools, volcanic pools, deep-sea hydrothermal vents, and subsurface clays; research into each of these possibilities is ongoing. See
abiogenesis.
Once you have a suitable experimental setup, off you go. Don't expect to get monkeys for a while. It took a whole planet and at least 500 million years for the first life to appear, then over 1.5 billion years for single-celled cyanobacteria to oxygenate the atmosphere, and another 1.5+ billion years for the first multicellular life to arise ~750 million years ago. Since then, things have speeded up.
Best take a flask of coffee and a camping stool.