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Kim, Minkyung; Kang, Wonseok; Kim, Jung Bog – Physics Teacher, 2021
Nearly everyone, including physics students, finds rainbows to be fascinating and much has been written about them. For example, in a 2020 paper, Kenneth Ford sets forth the basic theory of rainbows created by water droplets at the level of geometric optics and uses a graphical approach to address the question of the relative intensities of the…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Scientific Concepts, Physics, Light
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Matheus Fernandes Filgueiras; Endler Marcel Borges – Journal of Chemical Education, 2022
Students determine the iron mass in dietary supplements using four colorimetric assays. These colorimetric assays were selective for Fe[superscript 3+]. It was complexed by thiocyanide, salicylate, gallic acid, and Fe(CN)[subscript 6][superscript 4-], forming blood-red, red, violet, and blue complexes, respectively. The [lambda][subscript max] of…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Dietetics, Science Education, Science Experiments
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Liu, Shanshan; Ge, Xiuli; Zhang, Tao; Han, Yanyang; Cui, Wei; Guan, Rengui; Yang, Xin; He, Tao; Li, Qingzhong; Feng, Kai; Scheiner, Steve – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
To deliver state-of-the-art battery knowledge to undergraduates, we designed a feasible experiment to prepare flexible packaging batteries, aiming to reproduce industrial flexible packaging batteries in general chemistry laboratories. In our procedure, the materials involved are inexpensive, safe, and easy to use. No organic solvents or toxic…
Descriptors: Equipment, Chemistry, Laboratory Procedures, Science Experiments
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Kaur, Jasjeet; Sodhi, Gurvinder S. – Science Activities: Projects and Curriculum Ideas in STEM Classrooms, 2023
It may be asserted that there is no more effective deterrent to crime than the certainty of detection. Equally true is that there is no surer way to establishing identity than by fingerprints. The detection of fingerprints at the scene of crime is therefore one of the most powerful tools available in casework investigations. However, if the crime…
Descriptors: Crime, Evidence, Law Enforcement, Water
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Ferstl, Andrew; Duden, Emily R. – Physics Teacher, 2022
The conical pendulum is a classic introductory physics problem for teaching circular motion--a topic about which students frequently carry alternative conceptions. As teachers provide lessons to untangle these conceptions, it is good to allow students to practice their new knowledge in varied settings. This is one possible experiment that builds…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Motion, Mechanics (Physics), Scientific Concepts
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Kim, Kihyang; Paik, Seoung-Hey – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
Water electrolysis, a well-known and simple experiment, confirms that a water molecule comprises hydrogen and oxygen atoms. In this experiment, hydroxide or hydrogen ions generated from each electrode were identified using an indicator based on the assumption that electrodes, electrolytes, and indicators do not participate in the water…
Descriptors: Water, Science Instruction, Chemistry, Science Experiments
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Suárez, Álvaro; Baccino, Daniel; Martí, Arturo C. – Physics Teacher, 2020
The problem of a disc or cylinder initially rolling with slipping on a surface and subsequently transitioning to rolling without slipping is often cited in textbooks. Students struggle to qualitatively understand the difference between kinetic and static frictional forces--i.e., whereas the magnitude of the former is known, that of the latter can…
Descriptors: Physics, Kinetics, Motion, Science Experiments
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Ying-Nan Zhao; Jia-Cong Fu; Peng-Yu Zeng; Shi-Long Wei; Chang-Xu Lin; Kai Li; Shuang-Quan Zang – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
Chemical kinetics is a branch of physical chemistry that constitutes an essential part of undergraduate education. In general, a complex and expensive experimental apparatus is indispensable for observing the kinetics of a chemical process owing to the continuity of chemical reactions. Thus, intuitive visualization of the chemical kinetics using a…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Kinetics, Science Education, Undergraduate Study
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St. John, Pamela M.; Kienzle, Scott D.; Flood, Brianna M.; Moody, Troy V.; DePaola, Nicole F.; Mass, Spencer – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
With the enormous reliance on plastics in the world today, bisphenol A, an additive used in the synthesis of many plastics, such as polycarbonate, has been found almost everywhere in our environment including in soil, in natural waters, and inside organisms including humans. A multidisciplinary experiment is presented that involves using flatworms…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Plastics, Science Experiments, Animals
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Samuel Fura; Samuel Abidemi Oluwole; Queen Assala Hakim; Hikari Sanchez; Daniela Toledo; Aline Andrea Quintana; Christian Agatemor – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
Chemists have always designed and deployed cross-disciplinary approaches that interface chemistry with other disciplines to proffer solutions to many human problems. We designed a laboratory experiment that implements chemistry concepts in a biological model to prime undergraduate students to appreciate interdisciplinarity as an approach to…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Science, Science Experiments, Laboratory Experiments
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Kasprowiak, Amaury; Cazier-Dennin, Francine; Danjou, Pierre-Edouard – Journal of Chemical Education, 2020
A flash purification system using prepacked cartridges containing different silica weights and particle sizes was employed to demonstrate the influence of column characteristics on chromatographic resolution. This chromatographic experiment was a helpful introduction to chromatographic courses where the influence of particle sizes was addressed…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Experiments, Active Learning, Hands on Science
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Kaps, A.; Starmach, F. – Physics Teacher, 2020
Smartphones and their internal sensors offer new options for an experimental access to teach physics at secondary schools and universities. Especially in the field of mechanics, a number of smartphone-based experiments are known illustrating, e.g., linear and pendulum motions as well as rotational motions using the internal MEMS accelerometer and…
Descriptors: Physics, Handheld Devices, Measurement Equipment, Mechanics (Physics)
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Bliese, Sarah L.; O'Donnell, Deanna; Weaver, Abigail A.; Lieberman, Marya – Journal of Chemical Education, 2020
A two to three period analytical chemistry experiment has been developed which allows second year students to explore chemical color tests used to detect adulterated pharmaceuticals. Students prepare several paper analytical devices (PADs) to generate positive and negative controls antibiotics, along with cutting agents such as starch and chalk.…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Experiments, College Science, Science Laboratories
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Alliston, Caroline – Primary Science, 2022
The climate emergency is a source of anxiety for many young people. Images of drought, heat waves, wildfires, storms and flooding are increasingly appearing in the media. Today's children stand to be the recipients of our legacy of climate change, while not feeling empowered to do anything about it, so perhaps it is no wonder they are anxious.…
Descriptors: Elementary School Science, Climate, Ecology, World Problems
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Manos, Harry – Physics Teacher, 2019
Thomas Young (1773-1829) is best known in the physics community for his double-slit experiment demonstrating the wave property of light and for his work on the tensile properties of solids (Young's modulus). His reputation as a physicist was built almost entirely upon a short, three-year period (1801-1803) of intense work as an instructor in…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Scientific Concepts
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