Building A Steam Powered Boat: Edison Challenge 2007
Building A Steam Powered Boat: Edison Challenge 2007
Building A Steam Powered Boat: Edison Challenge 2007
2. 3. 4. 5.
The boat is now finished, and ready to launch: 6. The copper tubes must be full of water, and both open ends must be under water. The easy way to fill the tubes is to hold one end under water, and suck on the other end. 7. When the tubes are full of water, and the boat is resting in the water with both ends of the tubing under the water, light the candle.
When the coil of copper tubing is hot enough to boil the water inside, the boat will jerk ahead suddenly, then start moving evenly forward. If you put your fingers in the water just behind the tubes, you can feel little pulses of water, about 5 or 10 pulses per second. These pulses are pushing the boat along, creating ripples in the water behind the boat. The ripples in the water are caused by the 5 to 10 pulses per second that the engine makes as it operates. The easiest way to view this is to watch the reflection of a bright light on the surface of the water. Discussion: How does it do that? When the water in the coil boils, the steam expands. This pushes the water out of the tubes. The reaction pushes the boat forward. As the steam continues to expand, it encounters the section of tubing that used to be full of water. This tubing is cold, and the steam condenses back into water. This causes a vacuum to form, which pulls more water back into the tubes.
You would expect that the water moving back into the tubing would cause the boat to go backwards. However, the water doesn't get very far before it hits the end of the tube (the two streams of water in the two tubes meet each other in the coil). Any motion caused by the water being sucked into the tubes is reversed by the water hitting the front of the tube (the coil) and pushing the boat forward again. As you saw when you put your finger near the tubes, this back and forth water motion is fairly rapid, and the comparatively heavy boat never actually moves backwards at all. Conclusion: Once the students have designed their boat, have a contest using the tub of water where the students race their designs for a prize!