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Showing 1 to 15 of 42 results Save | Export
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Zhdanov, Arsenii; Pyay, Anna – Physics Teacher, 2022
Mobile phones are a widely used platform for educational apps, mobile health, and a variety of chemical tests. Here, we are working on a mobile phone-based physics lab (mPhysics) that uses a mobile phone's capabilities to run simple physics experiments and demonstrations. While a mobile phone can be used to analyze magnetic and optical properties…
Descriptors: Telecommunications, Handheld Devices, Physics, Science Instruction
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Nieh, Hwa-Ming; Chen, Huai-Yi – Physics Teacher, 2023
The Arduino microcontroller is currently one of the favorite tools of makers, and many teachers have used it in teaching or experiments. In addition, light-emitting diode (LED) smart lighting is the worldwide trend in lighting. There are many teaching demonstrations or applications of color addition using LEDs. Furthermore, the Internet of Things…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Light, Color, Heat
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Lena Geuer; Niklas Erdmann; Monika Lorenz; Hannah Albrecht; Tom Schanne; Marcel Cwienczek; Doris Geib; Dorina Strieth; Roland Ulber – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
In the course of combining the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) with the science education curriculum, the relevance of the micro- and macroalgae in education is based on the biotechnological future-oriented significance and the ever-growing trend toward plant-based nutrition. So, the micro- and macroalgae are finding their way onto the food…
Descriptors: Color, Biology, Food, Biotechnology
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Kazmierczak, Nathanael; Vander Griend, Douglas A. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2017
Despite widespread use in general chemistry laboratories, the crystal violet chemical kinetics experiment frequently suffers from erroneous student results. Student calculations for the reaction order in hydroxide often contain large asymmetric errors, pointing to the presence of systematic error. Through a combination of "in silico"…
Descriptors: Kinetics, Chemistry, Science Instruction, Science Experiments
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Garrido-Gonza´lez, Jose´ J.; Trillo-Alcala´, María; Sa´nchez-Arroyo, Antonio J. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2018
The generation of secondary colors in digital devices by means of the additive red, green, and blue color model (RGB) can be a valuable way to introduce students to the basics of spectroscopy. This work has been focused on the spectral separation of secondary colors of light emitted by a computer screen into red, green, and blue bands, and how the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Spectroscopy, Color, Educational Technology
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Gee, Clifford T.; Kehoe, Eric; Pomerantz, William C. K.; Penn, R. Lee – Journal of Chemical Education, 2017
Proteins are involved in nearly every biological process, which makes them of interest to a range of scientists. Previous work has shown that hand-held cameras can be used to determine the concentration of colored analytes in solution, and this paper extends the approach to reactions involving a color change in order to quantify protein…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, High Schools, Secondary School Science
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Šafranko, Silvija; Živkovic, Pavo; Stankovic, Anamarija; Medvidovic-Kosanovic, Martina; Széchenyi, Aleksandar; Jokic, Stela – Journal of Chemical Education, 2019
This work combines laboratory quantitative analysis of colored solutions and common devices for digital imaging (digital or web cameras or mobile phones, i.e., smartphones). ColorX software, specially designed for this study, was used for data collection and analysis in order to calculate concentrations of colored solutions from measured RGB…
Descriptors: Computer Graphics, Science Laboratories, Laboratory Experiments, Color
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Knutson, Theodore R.; Knutson, Cassandra M.; Mozzetti, Abbie R.; Campos, Antonio R.; Haynes, Christy L.; Penn, R. Lee – Journal of Chemical Education, 2015
Chemical kinetic experiments to determine rate laws are common in high school and college chemistry courses. For reactions involving a color change, rate laws can be determined experimentally using spectrophotometric or colorimetric equipment though this equipment can be cost prohibitive. Previous work demonstrated that inexpensive handheld camera…
Descriptors: Handheld Devices, Photography, Kinetics, Chemistry
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Montangero, Marc – Journal of Chemical Education, 2015
When dissolving copper in nitric acid, copper(II) ions produce a blue-colored solution. It is possible to determine the concentration of copper(II) ions, focusing on the hue of the color, using a smartphone camera. A free app can be used to measure the hue of the solution, and with the help of standard copper(II) solutions, one can graph a…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Secondary School Science, Telecommunications, Handheld Devices
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Alves, H.; Manhita, A.; Dias, C. Barrocas; Ferreira, T. – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2014
This paper describes a mini-project developed with 10th grade Portuguese students where, by using an experimental activity involving the use of natural dyes to colour wool, students acquired a better understanding of the concepts and relationship between the colour, the electromagnetic spectrum, and chemical bonding. As demonstrated by the results…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grade 10, Secondary School Science, Science Experiments
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Briju, Betsy J.; Wyatt, Sarah E. – American Biology Teacher, 2015
Instructors often present Mendelian genetics and molecular biology separately. As a result, students often fail to connect the two topics in a tangible manner. We have adopted a simple experiment to help link these two important topics in a basic biology course, using red and white onions bought from a local grocery store. A lack of red coloration…
Descriptors: Genetics, Molecular Biology, Science Laboratories, Science Experiments
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Birriel, Jennifer; Birriel, Ignacio – Physics Teacher, 2014
Glow sticks are a popular Halloween staple familiar to most of our students. The production of light via a chemical reaction is called "chemiluminescence," and glow sticks are often used as demonstrations and experiments in the chemistry classroom to study reaction rates as a function of temperature. A black light can be used to…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Light, Chemistry, Science Experiments
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Nalliah, Ruth E. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2015
A demonstration of the degradation of food coloring dyes by oxidation via the Fenton reaction can be substituted with a simpler demonstration using the oxidant oxone with iron(II) ions as an activator. The addition of small amounts of solid oxone and iron(II) sulfate to solutions containing mixtures of food coloring results in successive…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Secondary School Science, High Schools, College Science
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Dias, Alice M.; Ferreira, Maria La Salete – Journal of Chemical Education, 2015
A simple and ecofriendly procedure was developed in order to prepare extracts from red and green leaves. This procedure enables the separation of yellow, green, and red band pigments and optimizes the previously reported baking soda "supermarket column". The same extract also led to a novel and colorful potato starch column, which can…
Descriptors: Color, Science Instruction, Organic Chemistry, Secondary School Science
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Theilmann, Florian; Grusche, Sascha – Physics Education, 2013
Teaching prismatic colours usually boils down to establishing the take-home message that white light consists of "differently refrangible" coloured rays. This approach explains the classical spectrum of seven colours but has its limitations, e.g. in discussing spectra from setups with higher resolution or in understanding the well…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Color, Scientific Principles
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