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Valdez, Perla; Smith, K. Christopher – Journal of Chemical Education, 2020
A common misconception about dissolving is that heating and/or stirring are required for the dissolving process to occur. In this study, quantitative experimental evidence was collected and analyzed to demonstrate that neither heating nor stirring is required for dissolving. Educators can use the data and results in this study to address this…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Heat, Water
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Best, Katherine T.; Li, Diana; Helms, Eric D. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2017
The electrophilic addition of a hydrohalic acid (HX) to an alkene is often one of the first reactions learned in second-year undergraduate organic chemistry classes. During the ensuing discussion of the mechanism, it is shown that this reaction follows Markovnikov's rule, which states that the hydrogen atom will attach to the carbon with fewer…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Undergraduate Study, Science Instruction, College Science
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Yoshikawa, Masahiro; Koga, Nobuyoshi – Journal of Chemical Education, 2016
This study focuses on students' understandings of a liquid-gas system with liquid-vapor equilibrium in a closed system using a pressure-temperature ("P-T") diagram. By administrating three assessment questions concerning the "P-T" diagrams of liquid-gas systems to students at the beginning of undergraduate general chemistry…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Concept Formation, College Science
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Bonato, Jacopo; Gratton, Luigi M.; Onorato, Pasquale; Oss, Stefano – Physics Education, 2017
We propose the use of smartphone-based slow-motion video analysis techniques as a valuable tool for investigating physics concepts ruling mechanical wave propagation. The simple experimental activities presented here, suitable for both high school and undergraduate students, allows one to measure, in a simple yet rigorous way, the speed of pulses…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Mechanics (Physics), College Science
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Coleman, Aaron B.; Lam, Diane P.; Soowal, Lara N. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2015
Gaining an understanding of how science works is central to an undergraduate education in biology and biochemistry. The reasoning required to design or interpret experiments that ask specific questions does not come naturally, and is an essential part of the science process skills that must be learned for an understanding of how scientists conduct…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, College Science, Undergraduate Study, Biochemistry
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Del Bianco, Cristina; Torino, Domenica; Mansy, Sheref S. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2014
A laboratory exercise is described that helps students learn about lipid self-assembly by making vesicles under different solution conditions. Concepts covering the chemical properties of different lipids, the dynamics of lipids, and vesicle stability are explored. Further, the described protocol is easy and cheap to implement. One to two…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Laboratories, Biochemistry, Undergraduate Study
Bromfield Lee, Deborah Christina – ProQuest LLC, 2009
"Visualization" of chemical phenomena often has been limited in the teaching laboratories to the sense of sight. We have developed chemistry experiments that rely on senses other than eyesight to investigate chemical concepts, make quantitative determinations, and familiarize students with chemical techniques traditionally designed using only…
Descriptors: College Science, Chemistry, Science Instruction, Science Experiments