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Halpern, Arthur M.; Noll, Robert J. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2019
A spreadsheet-based exercise for students is described in which they are challenged to explain and reproduce the disparate temperature dependencies of the heat capacities of gaseous F[subscript 2] and N[subscript 2]. For F[subscript 2], C[subscript p,m] increases from 300 K, reaches a maximum at 2200 K, and then decreases to 74% of the maximum…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Spreadsheets, Learning Activities, Molecular Structure
Fitzgerald, Jeffrey P.; Ferrante, Robert F.; Brown, Michael; Cabarrus, Jonathan – Journal of Chemical Education, 2020
The concept of equilibrium vapor pressure plays a key role in the general chemistry curriculum; it is among the first and most easily demonstrated examples of equilibrium and frequently caps off the first semester of general chemistry where it illustrates the properties of liquids and intermolecular forces. We report here simple modifications of…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Chemistry, Science Experiments, Science Laboratories
Green, Travis C.; Gresh, Rebekkah H.; Cochran, Desiree A.; Crobar, Kaitlyn A.; Blass, Peter M.; Ostrowski, Alexis D.; Campbell, Dean J.; Xie, Charles; Torelli, Andrew T. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2020
Infrared (IR) thermography renders invisible infrared radiation with intuitive coloration in images and videos taken of objects, reactions, and processes. Educators can take advantage of this technology to extend students' sensory perception of chemical reactions or processes that absorb or release heat in rich detail. In theory, IR thermography…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, College Science, Science Laboratories
Volfson, Alexander; Eshach, Haim; Ben-Abu, Yuval – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2019
In the present theoretical study, we introduce the entropy concept into Chi's ontological shift theory. Chi distinguishes between two categories of process phenomena, direct and emergent, and claims that incorrectly considering emergent processes as direct ones is one of the sources of students' robust scientific misconceptions. The present study…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Science Instruction, High School Students, Secondary School Science
Kozliak, Evguenii I. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2014
The molar entropy of mixing yields values that depend only on the number of mixing components rather than on their chemical nature. To explain this phenomenon using the logic of chemistry, this article considers mixing of distinguishable particles, thus complementing the well-known approach developed for nondistinguishable particles, for example,…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Thermodynamics, Heat
Mussi, María Alejandra; Actis, Luis A.; de Mendoza, Diego; Cybulski, Larisa E. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2014
A laboratory exercise was designed to illustrate how physical stimuli such as temperature and light are sensed and processed by bacteria to elaborate adaptive responses. In particular, we use the well-characterized Des pathway of "Bacillus subtilis" to show that temperature modulates gene expression, resulting ultimately in modification…
Descriptors: Science Laboratories, Stimuli, Heat, Light
Molek, Karen Sinclair; Reyes, Karl A.; Burnette, Brandon A.; Stepherson, Jacob R. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2015
Measuring the heat capacity ratios, [gamma], of gases either through adiabatic expansion or sound velocity is a well established physical chemistry experiment. The most accurate experiments depend on an exact determination of sound origin, which necessitates the use of lasers or a wave generator, where time zero is based on an electrical trigger.…
Descriptors: Heat, Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Acoustics
Jenkins, Samir V.; Gohman, Taylor D.; Miller, Emily K.; Chen, Jingyi – Journal of Chemical Education, 2015
The rapid academic and industrial development of nanotechnology has led to its implementation in laboratory teaching for undergraduate-level chemistry and engineering students. This laboratory experiment introduces the galvanic replacement reaction for synthesis of hollow metal nanoparticles and investigates the optical properties of these…
Descriptors: Molecular Structure, Technology, Interdisciplinary Approach, Science Instruction
Nyasulu, Frazier; Barlag, Rebecca; Wise, Lindy; McMills, Lauren – Journal of Chemical Education, 2013
The thermodynamic properties of weak acid ionization reactions are determined. The thermodynamic properties are corresponding values of the absolute temperature (T), the weak acid equilibrium constant (K[subscript a]), the enthalpy of ionization (delta[subscript i]H[degrees]), and the entropy of ionization (delta[subscript i]S[degrees]). The…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Science Laboratories, College Science
Sweeney, William; Lee, James; Abid, Nauman; DeMeo, Stephen – Journal of Chemical Education, 2014
An experiment is described that determines the activation energy (E[subscript a]) of the iodide-catalyzed decomposition reaction of hydrogen peroxide in a much more efficient manner than previously reported in the literature. Hydrogen peroxide, spontaneously or with a catalyst, decomposes to oxygen and water. Because the decomposition reaction is…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Energy, Scientific Principles
Goodwin, Alan – School Science Review, 2012
Evaporation and boiling are both terms applied to the change of a liquid to the vapour/gaseous state. This article argues that it is the formation of bubbles of vapour within the liquid that most clearly differentiates boiling from evaporation although only a minority of chemistry textbooks seems to mention bubble formation in this context. The…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Textbooks, Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts