ch1 l2 Lesson Plan

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Chapter 1, Lesson 2: Molecules in Motion

Key Concepts
• Heating a liquid increases the speed of the molecules.
• An increase in the speed of the molecules competes with the attraction
between molecules and causes molecules to move a little further apart.
• Cooling a liquid decreases the speed of the molecules.
• A decrease in the speed of the molecules allows the attractions between
molecules to bring them a little closer together.

Summary
Students add food coloring to hot and cold water to see whether heating or cooling
affects the speed of water molecules. Students watch molecular model animations to
see the effect of heating and cooling on the molecules of a liquid. Students will also draw
their own molecular model.

Objective
Students will be able to explain, on the molecular level, that heating and cooling affect
molecular motion.

Evaluation
The activity sheet will serve as the “Evaluate” component of each 5-E lesson plan. The
activity sheets are formative assessments of student progress and understanding. A
more formal summative assessment is included at the end of each chapter.

Safety
Be sure you and the students wear properly fitting goggles.

Materials for Each Group


• Hot water (about 50 °C) in a clear plastic cup
• Cold water in a clear plastic cup
• Yellow food coloring in a small cup
• Blue food coloring in a small cup
• 4 droppers

ENGAGE
1. Ask students to help you design an experiment to see if the speed of water
molecules is different in hot water compared to cold water.
Ask students questions such as the following:
• Is the speed of water molecules different in hot and cold water? What can
we do to find out?
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Students may guess that molecules in hot water move faster. There are
several possible experiments that students might suggest to find out if this is
true. One of the more obvious ones is to heat water a lot so that it boils.
Then you can see the water moving. You could do that, but it requires a hot
plate, takes a fair amount of time, and may have to be done as a
demonstration instead of being an activity the students can do.

Tell students that one possible method is to use hot water and cold water and add
food coloring to the water. If the water molecules move faster at one temperature
than another, the food coloring should move faster too and make the movement
easy to see.

Ask students:
• Should we use the same amount of hot and cold water in our experiment?
Yes

• Should we use the same type of cup for the hot and cold water?
Yes

• Should we use the same number of drops of food coloring in each cup?
Yes

• Should we put the coloring in at the same time?


Yes

Explain that the different things like the amount of water, type of cup, and
number of drops of food coloring are called variables. It is important to keep all
the variables the same except for the one you are testing. Because we are trying
to find out if temperature affects the motion of water molecules, we should keep
everything else about the experiment the same. Temperature should be the only
variable. This way, if we notice something different between the two samples of
water, we will know that the difference in temperature is causing it.

Give each student an activity sheet.


Students will record their observations and answer questions about the activity
on the activity sheet. The Explain It with Atoms & Molecules and Take It Further
sections of the activity sheet will either be completed as a class, in groups, or
individually depending on your instructions. Look at the teacher version of the
activity sheet to find the questions and answers.

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EXPLORE
2. Do an activity to compare the speed of water molecules in hot and cold
water.

Question to investigate
Is the speed of water molecules different in hot and cold water?
Teacher preparation
This activity works best if there is a big difference between the temperatures of
the hot and cold water.
1. Squirt 4–5 drops of blue food coloring into a small cup for each group.
2. Squirt 4–5 drops of yellow food coloring into another small cup for each
group.
3. Add ice to about 6 cups of tap water to make it sufficiently cold.
4. Pour about ¾ cup of cold water (no ice) into a cup for each group.
5. Pour about ¾ cup of hot water into a cup for each group.

Materials for each group


• Hot water (about 50 °C) in a clear plastic cup
• Cold water in a clear plastic cup
• Yellow food coloring in a small cup
• Blue food coloring in a small cup
• 4 droppers

Procedure
1. With the help of your partners, use
droppers to carefully place 1 drop of
yellow and 1 drop of blue food coloring
into the hot and cold water at the same
time.

2. Allow the colors to mix on their own as


you watch them for a couple of minutes.

3. Record and discuss student observations.


Give students time after the activity to record their observations by answering
the following questions on their activity sheet. Once they have answered the
questions, discuss their observations as a whole group.
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• Describe what the colors looked like and how they moved and mixed in
the cold water.
• Describe what the colors looked like and how they moved and mixed in the
hot water.
• What does the speed of the mixing colors tell you about the speed of
the molecules in hot and cold water?
Expected results
The yellow and blue food coloring will spread faster in hot water than in cold.
The colors will combine and turn green in the hot water while the colors will
remain separate longer in the cold water. Students should agree that the colors
mix faster in the hot water because the molecules of both the water and food
coloring move faster in hot water than they do in cold water.

EXPLAIN
4. Show an animation of water molecules at different temperatures.
Show the molecular model animation Heating and Cooling a Liquid.
www.acs.org/middleschoolchemistry/simulations/chapter1/lesson2.html
Move the slider at the bottom of the window all the way to the right to show
that the water molecules are moving faster and are a little farther apart in hot
water.

Explain that the little balls represent the particles of a liquid, in this case water
molecules. Let students know that for now, they will use circles or spheres to
represent atoms and molecules, but eventually they will use a more detailed
model. For now, students should focus on the motion of the molecules, how
they interact, and their distance from one another.

Ask students:
• Are the molecules moving faster in cold or hot water?
Students should realize that the molecules of hot water are moving faster.
The molecules of cold water are moving slower.

• How does this match with your observations with the food coloring?
The food coloring in the hot water mixed faster than the coloring in the
cold water did.

• Look closely at the space between the molecules in cold and hot water.
Is there more space in between the molecules in hot water or in cold
water? Is it a lot of space?
Point out to students that molecules of hot water are moving faster and are
slightly further apart. The molecules of cold water are moving slower and are
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a little closer together. If students do not notice a difference, move the slider
all the way to the left again and then quickly to the right. Show the
animation a few times to give students a chance to notice the differences.
5. Have students answer questions about the animation and draw a model of
water molecules on their activity sheet.
Have students fill in the blank with the word increases or decreases on their
activity sheet as you read each sentence.
• Heating a substance increases molecular motion.
• Cooling a substance decreases molecular motion.
• As molecular motion increases, the space between molecules increases.
• As molecular motion decreases, the space between molecules decreases.
Project the image Water Molecules at Different Temperatures.
www.acs.org/middleschoolchemistry/simulations/chapter1/lesson2.html

Have students refer to the drawing of room temperature water on their activity
sheet and discuss how they should represent the molecules in cold and hot water.

Cold water
Ask students:
• Would the water molecules be closer together
or further apart?
Students should draw the circles a little closer
together than the circles in the room
temperature water. The water molecules are
closer together because the slower motion
allows the attractions to bring the molecules a
little closer together.

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• Would there be more or fewer motion lines?
Students should realize that since the molecules in the cold water are
moving slower, they should have fewer motion lines than the molecules in
room temperature water.

Hot water
Ask students:
• Would the water molecules be closer
together or further apart?
Students should draw the circles a little further
apart than the circles in the room temperature
water. The faster motion competes with the
attractions water molecules have for each other
and causes the molecules to move a little further
apart.

• Would there be more or fewer motion lines?


Students should realize that since the molecules in hot water are moving
faster than in cold or room temperature water, they should draw more
motion lines.
EXTEND
6. Have students explain why hot water takes up more space than room
temperature water.
Have students read and discuss the Take It Further question on the activity
sheet. After the class discussion, have students write their own response to the
following question in the space provided on the activity sheet.

• Let’s say that you measure exactly 100 milliliters of water in a graduated
cylinder. You heat the water to 100 °C and notice that the volume
increases to 104 milliliters. Using what you know about the attractions
between water molecules and the way heating affects molecular motion,
explain why the volume of water in the cylinder increases when it is
heated.
Students should
realize that the
molecules in hot
water move slightly
further apart,
accounting for the
increased volume.

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