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Showing 1 to 15 of 47 results Save | Export
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Trisha M. Gomez; Charmaine Luciano; Tam Nguyen; Sachel M. Villafañe; Michael N. Groves – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2025
A flipped classroom is typically one where some of the instruction occurs asynchronously prior to the scheduled synchronous meeting between students and the instructor. Since 2000, they have gained substantial popularity especially in STEM fields where they have been shown to have increased exam scores and reduce the number of students who fail.…
Descriptors: Flipped Classroom, Student Experience, Science Education, Chemistry
Mary Sever; Mark A. Young – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
A laboratory experiment that exposes students to fundamental concepts in kinetics and statistical thermodynamics to study systems of great current interest in nanotechnology by employing a foundational technique in physical chemistry is described. A modified commercial flash photolysis spectrometer was used to study photoinduced isomerization…
Descriptors: Laboratory Experiments, Scientific Concepts, Thermodynamics, Science Education
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Petrov, Mark G. – International Journal of Environmental and Science Education, 2016
Thermally activated analysis of experimental data allows considering about the structure features of each material. By modelling the structural heterogeneity of materials by means of rheological models, general and local plastic flows in metals and alloys can be described over. Based on physical fundamentals of failure and deformation of materials…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Education, Science Instruction, Methods
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Prigozhin, Maxim B.; Scott, Gregory E.; Denos, Sharlene – Journal of Chemical Education, 2014
In this activity, science education and modern technology are bridged to teach students at the high school and undergraduate levels about protein folding and to strengthen their model building skills. Students are guided from a textbook picture of a protein as a rigid crystal structure to a more realistic view: proteins are highly dynamic…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Models, Science Education, Undergraduate Students
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Kermen, Isabelle; Meheut, Martine – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2009
We present an analysis of the new French curriculum on chemical changes describing the underlying models and highlighting their relations to the empirical level. The authors of the curriculum introduced a distinction between the chemical change of a chemical system and the chemical reactions that account for it. We specify the different roles of…
Descriptors: Kinetics, Thermodynamics, Chemistry, Grade 12
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Gary, Ronald K. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2004
The concentration dependence of (delta)S term in the Gibbs free energy function is described in relation to its application to reversible reactions in biochemistry. An intuitive and non-mathematical argument for the concentration dependence of the (delta)S term in the Gibbs free energy equation is derived and the applicability of the equation to…
Descriptors: Biochemistry, Kinetics, Energy, Thermodynamics
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Waite, Boyd A. – Journal of Chemical Education, 1985
Heat is defined as a random or nondirected internal energy transfer between different bodies at different temperatures. Work is defined as oriented or nonrandom internal energy transfer. Both heat and work are demonstrated to lead to increases in temperature via interpretations from gas kinetic theory. (JN)
Descriptors: College Science, Energy, Heat, Higher Education
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Chang, On-Kok – Journal of Chemical Education, 1983
A fixed amount of an ideal gas is confined in an adiabatic cylinder and piston device. The relation between temperature and volume in initial/final phases can be derived from the first law of thermodynamics. However, the relation can also be derived based on kinetic models. Several of these models are discussed. (JN)
Descriptors: Chemistry, College Science, Higher Education, Kinetics
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Woolf, Alfred A. – Journal of Chemical Education, 1978
Compares the preparation and decomposition of potassium dibromoiodate and of phenyl iodine dichloride in a flexible experiment which accustoms the student to handle halogens, to test for halogens in mixtures, and to appreciate the difference between thermodynamic and kinetic control of reactions. (Author/MA)
Descriptors: Chemical Reactions, Chemistry, Kinetics, Laboratory Experiments
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Sommers, Trent S.; Nahir, Tal M. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2005
Theoretical and experimental evidence for the dependence of viscosities of the real gases on temperature is described, suggesting that this dependence is greater than that predicted by the kinetic theory of gases. The experimental results were obtained using common modern instrumentation and could be reproduced by students in analytical or…
Descriptors: Physics, Laboratory Experiments, Climate, Chemistry
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Sunderlin, Lee S.; Ryzhov, Victor; Keller, Lanea M. M.; Gaillard, Elizabeth R. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2005
An experiment is performed to measure the relative gas-phase basicities of a series of five amino acids to compare the results to literature values. The experiments use the kinetic method for deriving ion thermochemistry and allow students to perform accurate measurements of thermodynamics in a relatively short time.
Descriptors: Mechanics (Physics), Laboratory Experiments, Thermodynamics, Chemistry
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Smith, William R.; Missen, Ronald W. – Chemical Engineering Education, 1979
Chemical stoichiometry is discussed free from kinetic or thermodynamic considerations. The means for determining the following are presented: the number of stoichiometric degrees of freedom, the number of components, a permissible set of chemical equations, and a permissible set of components, for a closed system undergoing chemical reaction.…
Descriptors: Chemical Reactions, Chemistry, Engineering Education, Higher Education
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Weinhaus, F.; Barker, W. – American Journal of Physics, 1978
Describes the equilibrium states of a system composed of two interconnected, air-filled spherical membranes of different sizes. The equilibrium configurations are determined by the method of minimization of the availability of the system at constant temperature. (GA)
Descriptors: College Science, Heat, Higher Education, Kinetics
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Mullen, J. G.; And Others – American Journal of Physics, 1978
Discusses the criteria and procedure for optimizing the performance of Archibald rubber-band heat engines by using the appropriate choice of dimensions, minimizing frictional torque, maximizing torque and balancing the rubber band system. (GA)
Descriptors: Demonstrations (Educational), Engines, Force, Heat
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Snadden, R. B. – Journal of Chemical Education, 1985
Kinetic versus thermodynamic control of product formation is discussed in undergraduate textbooks, and journal papers suggest suitable experiments to illustrate this concept. In rationalizing experimental observations, this paper offers a new alternative to that conventionally employed and provides students with an interesting exercise in…
Descriptors: Chemical Reactions, Chemistry, College Science, Higher Education
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