Lab #6 – Heating Up and Cooling Down
Copy ↑ into your Lab/Science Notebooks
Do you remember how long it took for a cup of hot chocolate to cool before you could take a sip? Why do hot drinks come in styrofoam or special paper cups? Why do teachers drink hot drinks out of porcelain mugs? Why not glass, metal, or plastic cups? ←↑just read that↗ ↗
Problem copy this as always
There is a beaker of ice water in front of you; what will happen to it over time?
There is a beaker of room temperature water in front of you; what will happen to it over time?
There is a beaker of boiling water in front of you; what will happen to it over time?
There is a beaker of room temperature water in front of you; what will happen to it over time?
There is a beaker of boiling water in front of you; what will happen to it over time?
Hypothesis copy this as always, make your own hypotheses; use the prompts below as guidance ↙↘
I predict that if I leave a beaker of ice water out then this will happen.... because....
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I predict that If I leave a beaker of room temperature water out then this will happen.... because....
I predict that If I leave a beaker of boiling water out then this will happen.... because.... |
Materials copy this as always
3 beakers (I used pint glasses)
3 thermometers (I used one thermometer)
Online Stopwatch
Ice
Hot plate (I used a hot water pot)
Measuring cup, 250 mL
Measuring cup, 250 mL
Procedure READ this as always. Edit, I've changed it a bit;I used pint glasses, not beakers, and the volumes I used were 250mL, not 100mL
- Use the data table to record the temperature of water in three beakers every minute from 0 to 10 min.
- Fill one beaker with 100 mL of water. Place the beaker on a hot plate and bring the water to a boil. Carefully remove the hot beaker from the hot plate.
- Record the water temperature in your data table at minute 0, and then every minute for 10 min.
- Repeat step 3 starting with water at room temperature and ice water.
Results copy these 3 data tables as always, use a ruler!
Ice Water
Time (min.)
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Temperature ('F)
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Temperature ('C)
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0
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32’F
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0’C
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1
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2
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3
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4
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5
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6
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7
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8
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9
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10
|
Room Temperature water
Time (min.)
|
Temperature ('F)
|
Temperature ('C)
|
0
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1
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2
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3
| ||
4
| ||
5
| ||
6
| ||
7
| ||
8
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9
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10
|
Boiling Water
Time (min.)
|
Temperature ('F)
|
Temperature ('C)
|
0
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212’F
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100’C
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1
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2
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3
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4
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5
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6
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7
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8
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9
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10
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Analysis Make 4 line graphs: a, b, c, d
1. Use your data tables to construct four line graphs.
a. Ice Water: x-axis - Time (min), y-axis - Temperature (oF)
b. Room Temperature Water: x-axis - Time (min), y-axis - Temperature (oF)
c. Boiling Water: x-axis - Time (min), y-axis - Temperature (oF)
d. Construct a fourth line graph using the data from all three data tables; there should be three lines: ice water (colored blue), room temperature, and boiling water (colored red).
a. Ice Water: x-axis - Time (min), y-axis - Temperature (oF)
b. Room Temperature Water: x-axis - Time (min), y-axis - Temperature (oF)
c. Boiling Water: x-axis - Time (min), y-axis - Temperature (oF)
d. Construct a fourth line graph using the data from all three data tables; there should be three lines: ice water (colored blue), room temperature, and boiling water (colored red).
This is an example of line graph a. ↓↓↓↓
Please answer ALL of these Analysis questions in complete sentences.
2. What happened to the temperature of the boiling water over time? Explain your answer.
Please answer ALL of these Analysis questions in complete sentences.
2. What happened to the temperature of the boiling water over time? Explain your answer.
3. What happened to the temperature of the ice water over time? Explain your answer.
4. What happened to the temperature of the room temperature water over time? Explain your answer.
5. Do you think there will be a temperature at which they would eventually meet? If so, where do you think it will be? If not, why not?
6. Think Deeper: Why is the title of this lab called "Heating Up and Cooling Down" ?
7. Go Beyond: Illustrate the three beakers, label them, draw "heat arrows" showing the flow of thermal energy from the higher temperature substance to the lower temperature substance.
8. Using a temperature conversion tool, convert the fahrenheit to celsius in your data tables. eg temperature converter
Edit: I am aware that you all did not complete this lab on your own. Please watch the videos, and complete the Conclusion based on the videos, the graphs, and theAnalysis responses.
7. Go Beyond: Illustrate the three beakers, label them, draw "heat arrows" showing the flow of thermal energy from the higher temperature substance to the lower temperature substance.
8. Using a temperature conversion tool, convert the fahrenheit to celsius in your data tables. eg temperature converter
Edit: I am aware that you all did not complete this lab on your own. Please watch the videos, and complete the Conclusion based on the videos, the graphs, and theAnalysis responses.
Conclusion
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And yes, follow the prompts to complete your Conclusion↖↗
When is it due?
ReplyDelete"Anonymous" please use a name that me and the rest of the Science Scholars will know you by.
ReplyDeletek.tks
Do we fill out the data table according to your video that you sent on GC?
ReplyDelete-Winnie
no u dont bruh
DeleteIf we don't have our lab notebooks what notebook do we use?
ReplyDelete- Sarah Bachir 604
Use your Science Notebook or Urban Advantage Science Notebooks I gave you as a gift. :)
DeleteWhen is it due???
ReplyDeleteKeep an eye on Science Scholars' Slides today for an update
DeleteSo is this the alternate assignment if we didnt do the previous one? Because this isn't the regular assignment that was assigned
ReplyDeleteThis is Mohammed Tayeh Btw, idk why it says unknown on my screen
DeleteNo, this is not an alternate assignment. This is a REAL assignment.
DeleteIf we didn’t do the process at home, do we fill out the data table with the information from the 0-32 minute video on GC
ReplyDelete