1 / 14

Mixing Warm and Cold Water

Mixing Warm and Cold Water. Collecting Data using Temperature Probe Aligning with Math & Science standards Based on the Vernier lab activity. Outline. Goals Apply the relationship between heat and temperature Determine heat energy lost and heat energy gained

fuller
Download Presentation

Mixing Warm and Cold Water

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mixing Warm and Cold Water Collecting Data using Temperature Probe Aligning with Math & Science standards Based on the Vernier lab activity

  2. Outline • Goals • Apply the relationship between heat and temperature • Determine heat energy lost and heat energy gained • Determine the relationship between heat energy lost and heat energy gained • Engage: Page Keeley Assessment Probe • Explore: Video, model creation • Explain: Lab activity • Elaborate: Simulation with gas molecules • Evaluate: Compare your results with other models • Debrief

  3. Engage: What do you think? From Uncovering Student Ideas in Science, Vol. 2 by Page Keeley and others

  4. Explore: Create a model to describe heat • Watch the Bill Nye video • Create a scientific model to explain what Bill Nye said about the match and the swan sculpture. • A scientific model is a description or explanation of a concept that can be tested (if needed) • Your model should include words and pictures. • Think: create your model. • Pair: After about three minutes, discuss your model with a neighbor. • Share: Volunteer to tell your model to the rest of the group.

  5. Explain: Mixing water activity • You and your partner(s) will be mixing water of different temperatures and determining heat transfer amounts. H is the change in heat energy of the water. Note that H can be either positive or negative. • Use the formula H = m  Cp  T • m = mass of water used. 1.0 ml of water is 1.0 grams • Cp = specific heat capacity = 4.18 J/g°C for water • T = Tf – Ti • Put you data on the class data slide

  6. Explain: Class data • Questions to ponder with your partners and neighbors: • How do the two rows of numbers compare to one another? • What other things may have gained or lost heat energy? How did this affect the activity?

  7. Explain: Class data Tuesday morning • Questions to ponder with your partners and neighbors: • How do the two rows of numbers compare to one another? • What other things may have gained or lost heat energy? How did this affect the activity?

  8. Explain: Theory • Assuming no heat energy transfer to the environment, when two substances of different temperatures mix, the final temperature (equilibrium temperature) is between the two initial temperatures. • The equilibrium temperature depends on the mass (m), the initial temperature and the type (Cp ) of each substance. • The heat energy gained by one substance equals the heat energy lost by the other substance. Or: • mhot  (Cp )hot  Thot + mcold  (Cp )cold  T cold = 0 • “Hot” and “cold” are relative terms. 100°C is cold compared to 200°C.

  9. Elaborate: Molecular model of heat • Start Gas Properties simulation • I will initially pump 100 molecules of gas at 200 Kelvin into the box. (note: the temperature is a measure of the kinetic energy of the molecules). Predict what will happen to the final temperature in the following separate situations. • I add 100 molecules of gas at 100 Kelvin. • I add 100 molecules of gas at 250 Kelvin. • I add 200 molecules of gas at 100 Kelvin. • I add 300 molecules of gas at 300 Kelvin.

  10. Screen shot of Gas Properties simulation

  11. Evaluate: Other models of heat Select the best model of heat from the choices below and support your answer with data from the activity. • Conspicuous heat: heat is only associated with very hot bodies and large amounts of heat • Dynamic heat: heat is associated with movement • Motile heat: heat is something that spreads out from one place to another • Standard heat: any temperature above freezing is heat and any temperature below freezing is cold • Regional heat: heat is a static substance that occupies a particular volume From Making Sense of Secondary Science by Rosalind Driver and others, page 138-139

  12. Evaluate: Comparing models • Show of hands for each model • How do our findings inform each model? • Conspicuous heat: even the small volume of water had heat energy • Dynamic heat: the simulation showed this to be true at the molecular level • Motile heat: the activity and the simulation showed heat energy changes within a fixed volume • Standard heat: simulation showed substances below freezing still transferred heat energy • Regional heat: heat energy comes from moving molecules

  13. Brief reflection • In the note card, write down one or two things your like to discuss about the lesson during the debriefing time. • This can include, but is not limited to: content, teaching methods, the 5E learning cycle, assessment, etc. • Discuss this with your neighbor.

  14. Debriefing the science teaching • Review the use of the 5 E learning cycle • Review the use of formative assessment in the lesson • Review the background knowledge required to be successful in the lesson • Discuss the use of learning progressions associated with this lesson

More Related