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Showing 1 to 15 of 43 results Save | Export
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Albright, Haley; Stephenson, Corey R. J.; Schindler, Corinna S. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
A two-week summer camp was designed, implemented, and then updated for high school students focusing on organic chemistry, solar energy, and green chemistry principles. Students learn about laboratory safety, perform organic reactions, go on field trips, and take part in interactive lessons that focus on both fundamental chemistry topics as well…
Descriptors: Summer Programs, High School Students, Organic Chemistry, Energy
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Perea Martins, J. E. M. – Physics Education, 2018
This work describes a simple experiment to measure the resistor temperature as a function of the applied power and proves that it is an efficient way to introduce some important physical concepts in classroom, including the Joule's first law, hot-spot temperature, thermal resistance, thermal dissipation constant, time constant and the Newton's law…
Descriptors: Physics, Energy, Science Experiments, Scientific Concepts
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Sanders, Richard W.; Crettol, Gregory L.; Brown, Joseph D.; Plummer, Patrick T.; Schendorf, Tara M.; Oliphant, Alex; Swithenbank, Susan B.; Ferrante, Robert F.; Gray, Joshua P. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2018
Electrochemistry is primarily taught in first-year undergraduate courses through batteries; this lab focuses instead on corrosion to apply electrochemical concepts of electrolytes, standard reduction potentials, galvanic cells, and other chemistry concepts including Le Chatelier's Principle and Henry's Law. Students investigate galvanic corrosion…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Undergraduate Study, College Science
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Mäntylä, Terhi; Hämäläinen, Ari – Science & Education, 2015
The language of physics is mathematics, and physics ideas, laws and models describing phenomena are usually represented in mathematical form. Therefore, an understanding of how to navigate between phenomena and the models representing them in mathematical form is important for a physics teacher so that the teacher can make physics understandable…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Mathematics, Scientific Principles
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Doran, Patrick; Hawk, William; Siegel, P. B. – Physics Teacher, 2014
Maxwell's discovery of the relation between electricity, magnetism, and light was one of the most important ones in physics. With his added displacement current term, Maxwell showed that the equations of electricity and magnetism produced a radiation solution, electromagnetic (EM) radiation, that traveled with a speed of c=1/v(e0µ0). The…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Energy, Magnets
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Baird, William H. – Physics Education, 2013
Some of the results from the electrostatics portion of introductory physics are particularly difficult for students to understand and/or believe. For students who have yet to take vector calculus, Gauss's law is far from obvious and may seem more difficult than Coulomb's. When these same students are told that the minimum potential…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Educational Technology, Teaching Methods, Spreadsheets
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Bendall, Sophie; Birdsall-Wilson, Max; Jenkins, Rhodri; Chew, Y. M. John; Chuck, Christopher J. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2015
Chemical engineering is rarely encountered before higher-level education in the U.S. or in Europe, leaving prospective students unaware of what an applied chemistry or chemical engineering degree entails. In this lab experiment, we report the implementation of a three-day course to showcase chemical engineering principles for 16-17 year olds…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Chemical Engineering, Science Laboratories, Laboratory Experiments
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Carrascal Lecumberri, Edorta; Sala Lizarraga, José María – Journal of Technology and Science Education, 2013
The objective of this paper is to present a laboratory program designed for the Thermodynamics course offered in the Department of Thermal Engineering at the University of the Basque Country. With reference to one of the examples given in the textbook by Moran, Shapiro, Boettner and Bailey (2012), the balances of mass, energy, entropy and exergy…
Descriptors: Thermodynamics, Science Instruction, College Science, Foreign Countries
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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
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Singh, Satya Pal – European Journal of Physics Education, 2013
In this paper of I have reviewed the test done for validating the special theory of relativity using masers and lasers in last one century. Michelson-Morley did the first experimental verification for the isotropy of space for the propagation of light in 1887. It has an accuracy of 1/100th of a fringe shift. The predicted fringe shift on the basis…
Descriptors: Lasers, Scientific Concepts, Science Experiments, Light
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Ladino, L. A. – Physics Education, 2013
A different method to study the charging and discharging processes of a capacitor is presented. The method only requires a high impedance voltmeter. The charging and discharging processes of a capacitor are usually studied experimentally using an oscilloscope and, therefore, both processes are studied as a function of time. The approach presented…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Concepts, Science Experiments
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Quinn, Terry; Quinn, Lucas; Davis, Richard – Physics Education, 2013
A watt balance is an electromechanical device that allows a mass to be determined in terms of measurable electrical and mechanical quantities, themselves traceable to the fundamental constants of physics. International plans are well advanced to redefine the unit of mass, the kilogram, in terms of a fixed numerical value for the Planck constant. A…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Laboratory Equipment, Measurement Equipment
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Dabke, Rajeev B.; Gebeyehu, Zewdu – Journal of Chemical Education, 2012
A simple 3-h physical chemistry undergraduate experiment for the quantitative analysis of acetic acid in household vinegar is presented. The laboratory experiment combines titration concept with electrolysis and an application of the gas laws. A vinegar sample was placed in the cathode compartment of the electrolysis cell. Electrolysis of water…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Laboratory Experiments, College Science, Science Instruction
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Ibanez, Jorge G.; Puente-Caballero, Rodrigo; Torres-Perez, Jonatan; Bustos, Daniel; Carmona-Orbezo, Aranzazu; Sevilla, Fortunato B., III – Journal of Chemical Education, 2012
A novel procedure for the preparation of electrochromic WO[subscript 3] films from readily available materials is presented. It is based on the electrochemical preparation of potassium tungstate from tungsten filaments of incandescent light bulbs in a potassium hydroxide solution. Tungstic acid is then produced by proton exchange using a…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Inorganic Chemistry, Science Instruction, Energy
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Eckert, Bodo; Grober, Sebastian; Vetter, Martin; Jodl, Hans-Jorg – European Journal of Physics, 2012
The Millikan oil-drop experiment, to determine the elementary electrical charge e and the quantization of charge Q = n [middle dot] e, is an essential experiment in physics teaching but it is hardly performed in class for several reasons. Therefore, we offer this experiment as a remotely controlled laboratory (RCL). We describe the interactivity…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Energy, Scientific Principles
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