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Fenton, Owen S.; Sculimbrene, Bianca R. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
Understanding stereochemistry is an important and difficult task for students to master in organic chemistry. In both introductory and advanced courses, students are encouraged to explore the spatial relationships between molecules, but this exploration is often limited either to the lecture hall or the confines of the library. As such, we sought…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Spectroscopy, College Science, Scientific Concepts
Kjonaas, Richard A.; Williams, Peggy E.; Counce, David A.; Crawley, Lindsey R. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
A method for the synthesis of ibuprofen in introductory organic chemistry laboratory courses is reported. This experiment requires two 3-h lab sessions. All of the reactions and techniques are a standard part of any introductory organic chemistry course. In the first lab session, students reduce p-isobutylacetophenone to an alcohol and then…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Laboratories, Pharmacology, Science Instruction
French, Larry G. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
Western red cedar leaf affords an essential oil characterized by high thujone content. Students in an advanced organic chemistry lab course isolate a single thujone diastereoisomer from commercially available cedar leaf oil. Treatment of crude oil, containing roughly 70% thujone, predominately as [alpha]-thujone (6.5:1), with ethanolic sodium…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Instruction, College Science, Science Laboratories
Ballard, C. Eric – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
Although transition-metal-catalyzed reactions are important in contemporary organic chemistry, relatively few resources for the second-year organic chemistry curriculum discuss the subject. The inquiry-based experiment described here, an iron-catalyzed preparation of biphenyl from bromobenzene, introduces this topic. The reaction uses an…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Laboratories, Science Instruction, Science Experiments
Susman, K.; Razpet, N.; Cepic, M. – Physics Education, 2011
Water transport in tall trees is an everyday phenomenon, seldom noticed and not completely understood even by scientists. As a topic of current research in plant physiology it has several advantages for presentation within school physics lectures: it is interdisciplinary and clearly shows the connection between physics and biology; the…
Descriptors: Physics, Physiology, Science Laboratories, Scientific Concepts
Lee, C. K.; Wong, H. K. – Physics Education, 2011
An experiment to verify the Doppler effect of sound waves is described. An ultrasonic source is mounted at the end of a simple pendulum. As the pendulum swings, the rapid change of frequency can be recorded by a stationary receiver using a simple frequency-to-voltage converter. The experimental results are in close agreement with the Doppler…
Descriptors: Laboratory Equipment, Science Experiments, Science Instruction, Motion
Vollmer, Michael; Mollmann, Klaus-Peter – Physics Education, 2011
A selection of hands-on experiments from different fields of physics, which happen too fast for the eye or video cameras to properly observe and analyse the phenomena, is presented. They are recorded and analysed using modern high speed cameras. Two types of cameras were used: the first were rather inexpensive consumer products such as Casio…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Science Activities, Mechanics (Physics), Scientific Principles
Jasperson, Christopher; Pollman, Anthony – Physics Education, 2011
Using first principles, a theoretical equation for the maximum and actual muzzle velocities for a pneumatic cannon was recently derived. For a fixed barrel length, this equation suggests that the muzzle velocity can be enhanced by maximizing the product of the initial pressure and the volume of the propellant gas and decreasing the projectile…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Photography, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles
Chang, Wheijen – Asia-Pacific Forum on Science Learning and Teaching, 2011
Physics students are usually unaware of the limitations and functions of related principles, and they tend to adopt "hot formulas" inappropriately. This paper introduces four real-life examples for bridging five principles, from fluids to thermodynamics, including (1) buoyant force, (2) thermal expansion, (3) the ideal-gas law, (4) the 1st law,…
Descriptors: Thermodynamics, Mechanics (Physics), Science Instruction, Scientific Principles
Vogt, Patrik; Kuhn, Jochen; Muller, Sebastian – Physics Teacher, 2011
This paper continues the collection of experiments that describe the use of cell phones as experimental tools in physics classroom education. We describe a computer-aided determination of the free-fall acceleration "g" using the acoustical Doppler effect. The Doppler shift is a function of the speed of the source. Since a free-falling objects…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Telecommunications, Science Experiments
Csizmar, Clifford M.; Force, Dee Ann; Warner, Don L. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
As part of an NSF-funded Course Curriculum and Laboratory Improvement (CCLI) project that seeks, in part, to increase student exposure to scientific instrumentation, a gas chromatography experiment has been integrated into the second-semester general chemistry laboratory curriculum. The experiment uses affordable, commercially available equipment…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, College Science, Science Experiments
de Izarra, Charles; de Izarra, Gregoire – European Journal of Physics, 2011
This paper deals with the study of a toy CD hovercraft used in the fluid mechanics course for undergraduate students to illustrate the lubrication theory described by the Stokes equation. An experimental characterization of the toy hovercraft (measurements of the air flow value, of the pressure in the balloon and of the thickness of the air film…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Mechanics (Physics), Toys, College Science
Murray, Tracey Arnold – Science Scope, 2011
Adding mint Mentos candy to a two-liter bottle of Diet Coke produces a fountain of soda foam that can reach 3 m high. A demonstration such as this can get a "Wow" out of most audiences, usually followed by a "Do it again!"--but can it be used to teach anything? The answer is a definite "Yes," and what follows is a guided inquiry activity that…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Science Experiments, Science Instruction, Secondary School Science
Boatwright, Adrian L.; Puttick, Simon; Licence, Peter – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
Used since the time of the ancient Egyptians as a method for transferring liquids from one vessel to another, the siphon is a dependable tool. Although, the act of siphoning beer from a fermentation barrel or wine from a demijohn is a skill that has been passed down from generation to generation, do we really know how the siphon works? It is…
Descriptors: Secondary School Science, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles, Science Experiments
Kuntzleman, Thomas S.; Kenney, Joshua B.; Hasbrouck, Scott; Collins, Michael J.; Amend, John R. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
Coulometric titrations involve the quantification of analyte by measurements of current and time. In most coulometric titrations, the anode and cathode are placed in isolated cells that are connected by a salt bridge. By contrast, the experiments described here involve coulometric titrations (of acidic protons in solution) using a silver anode and…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, College Science, Science Experiments

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