Read 125 Physics Projects for the Evil Genius Online
Authors: Jerry Silver
Figure 92-3
Normally soft and pliable objects when deep frozen become brittle. Courtesy PASCO
.
The frozen banana and flowers will shatter. The solder will temporarily become much more spring-like. The air-filled balloon will shrink as the air inside contracts from the extreme cold, and then it will re-inflate as it warms up again. The liquid nitrogen-filled balloon will expand and possibly burst. The lids of the film canister/prescription bottle will pop off. The cork will shoot out of the metal cylinder.
Objects become more brittle and contract from the extreme cold. As the liquid nitrogen evaporates, it occupies a much larger volume. For a given volume, the gas has a much larger pressure.
For many experimenters, liquid nitrogen may not be easily available on a daily basis. While you have a supply of liquid nitrogen available, you may want to consider doing the other projects that also require liquid nitrogen, such as
Project 101
(effect of temperature on resistance) and
Project 106
(superconductivity).
Liquid nitrogen provides an opportunity to explore low-temperature physics. This includes making normally elastic materials brittle. Materials cooled by liquid nitrogen contract. As liquid nitrogen evaporates, it expands.
Is it possible to boil water over a flame in a paper cup? This project lets you find out why this is possible.
The water will boil in the paper cup. If the cup is coated with wax, the wax may melt, especially above the waterline. If there is a circular rim on the bottom, it may burn without burning through the cup. The paper cup filled with sand will char, but it won’t necessarily burst into flames. The Styrofoam will melt and, where the flame is applied, possibly leave a hole in the side of the cup.
Figure 93-1
Boiling water in a paper cup
.
When heat is added to water, its temperature increases until it reaches the boiling point of water at 100°C. The paper doesn’t burn because heat is conducted away from the paper before it can reach its kindling point (the temperature where it begins to burn). Paper begins to burn at around 233°C (which is close to the nominal value 451°F for paper, made famous in Ray Bradbury’s novel
Fahrenheit 451
). The water temperature can increase until it boils and still remain well below the kindling temperature of paper.
Sand conducts heat away from the paper. However, unlike the paper, sand does not undergo a phase changes as water does at its boiling point. The temperature increases above 100°C. This is why we see charring in the paper cup containing sand.
The Styrofoam is an insulator. As a result, the water does not conduct heat away from the Styrofoam cup as it does with the paper cup, which conducts heat much more readily. This explains why the flame melts the Styrofoam.
An alternative approach is to wrap a piece of paper around a metal pipe and note its response to a flame. In a similar manner, the metal pipe conducts heat away from the paper before it can start to burn.
Fill the paper bag with water and hold it over the flame. The water conducts heat away from the paper at a fast enough rate to keep it from burning.
Phase changes in matter, such as the transition from liquid to vapor, take place at a constant temperature called the
boiling point
. A liquid cannot exceed the boiling point until all the liquid has evaporated. Materials such as sand conduct heat much better than air. Some materials such as Styrofoam are much better insulators than other materials, such as paper.
In this project, you use a piece of ice to cause a container of very warm water to start boiling. This is definitely not what most people would expect.
Shortly after the ice cubes are placed on the bottom of the flask, bubbles start to emerge from the top (near the stopper). These bubbles continue and the water in the flask boils for a short time. Careful observation should convince anyone watching that the bubbles are coming from the liquid itself and are not a leak in the rubber stopper. See
Figure 94-2
.
Figure 94-1
Bringing a flask filled with water to (just under) boling
.
When a vapor (such as the air/water vapor mixture) is cooled, it contracts. As the volume of gas above the hot water decreases, the pressure also decreases. Water boils at 100°C (212°F) at standard atmospheric pressure, but at a slightly
lower
temperature when the pressure above the liquid is reduced.
Figure 94-2
Boiling water with ice
.
You can try this another way:
Water boils at a lower temperature when the pressure of the air above it is lowered.
Much of physics concerns itself with how one form of energy is changed into another. This experiment explores how heat can cause an electrical current to flow. Although this is not yet efficient enough to be used as a significant source of electrical power, it is widely used in the form of thermocouples to measure temperature. This is known as the
Seebeck effect
.