This lesson contains 40 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.
Items in this lesson
IGCSE Chemistry 0620
Variables in Chemistry
30 August 2023
Slide 1 - Slide
Describe how you feel right now
using an emoji.
😒🙁😐🙂😃
Slide 2 - Poll
remember the atomic numbers and symbols of elements correctly
differentiate the three types of variables
write a plan of a practical investigation project following the format given
submit our group plan for marking and possible suggestions
I intend to:
30 August 2023, Wednesday
Slide 3 - Slide
IGCSE Chemistry 0620
Variables in Chemistry
30 August 2023
Slide 4 - Slide
What did I learn last session?
Does an investigation need all types of variables?
Review
30 August 2023, Wednesday
Slide 5 - Slide
IGCSE Chemistry 0620
Variables in Chemistry
30 August 2023
Slide 6 - Slide
Element Quiz 03
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T O D O:
Open your laptop.
Go to https://play.blooket.com/play.
Enter the code shown and type name.
Play and learn.
timer
5:00
WALT: Remember the atomic numbers and symbols of elements correctly
Slide 7 - Slide
dashboard.blooket.com
Slide 8 - Link
Does an investigation need all types of variables?
Yes.
No.
Slide 9 - Poll
Conducting an investigation
A chemist causes a change and records the effect of that change.
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Slide 10 - Slide
Scientific Method
The process of thinking about scientific questions
The scientific method is a cycle.
By testing the hypothesis, we make new observations that require us to look for patterns, thereby formulating new laws that require new hypotheses that then need to be tested, etc.
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Slide 11 - Slide
Scientific Method
making observations to accumulate information
deriving scientific laws by organising the information and looking for regularities or patterns
making a hypothesis to explain why the regularities or patterns exist
tesing the hypothesis by a suitable experiment and communicating the findings and probable explanations to others
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Slide 12 - Slide
Observations
Seeing is NOT the same as observing.
Observation requires concentration, alertness, and all or most of our senses.
Observations also include making measurements.
Observations which are recorded are called scientific data.
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Slide 13 - Slide
The senses a Chemist uses to make observations are:
sight (safety: wear eye protection in the Lab)
smell (safety: gently waft the smell to your nose using your hand)
hearing (safety: keep a suitable distance if safe to do so)
touching (safety: only touch if considered safe to do so)
tasting (safety: NEVER taste anything you found or produced in the Lab!)
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Slide 14 - Slide
Example of Observations:
In a test tube, colourless dilute hydrochloric acid is added to a dark solid, which is iron(2+)sulfide (iron(II)sulfide).
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sight : (a) bubbles appear in the solution originating at the surface of the iron(2+) sulfide (iron(II) sulfide) - (b) the amount of solid iron(2+) sulfide (iron(II) sulfide) diminishes over time
smell : the odour of rotten eggs is detected
hearing : a fizzing sound may be heard
touching : the test tube becomes warm
tasting : never taste anything you found or produced in the Lab!
Slide 15 - Slide
IGCSE Chemistry 0620
Variables in Chemistry
30 August 2023
Slide 16 - Slide
Experimental Design
An experiment is conducted to test a hypothesis.
30 August 2023, Wednesday
FEATURES OF A WELL-DESIGNED EXPERIMENT
⚛ A well-defined aim (goal or objective) = can be disproved by experiment.
⚛ Results that can be reproduced (precision).
⚛ Errors that can be analysed.
Slide 17 - Slide
A. Defining the Aim of the Experiment
The aim, goal or objective, of an experiment is to test the validity of a hypothesis.
A hypothesis is a possible answer to a scientific question.
Experiment is conducted = to decide whether the possible answer to the question is most likely to be "true" or not.
A well-defined aim, goal or objective, will be one which can be tested experimentally and can be disproved.
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Slide 18 - Slide
Example
Scientific Question: What temperature does water boil at?
Possible Answer (Hypothesis): Water boils at 100°C.
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Imagine this!
If you give a thousand city-dwellers worldwide with digital thermometers that read to the nearest 10°C, they would all report that water boils at 100°C.
But will you have proved that the hypothesis is correct?
Slide 19 - Slide
Example
Scientific Question: What temperature does water boil at?
Possible Answer (Hypothesis): Water boils at 100°C
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If you performed the same experiment using digital thermometers that read to the nearest 0.1°C, you would find a huge range of temperatures reported for the boiling point of water.
Have you disproved the hypothesis?
Slide 20 - Slide
Hypothesis
An hypothesis is useful when it is a statement that can be disproved.
Results of an experiment may support the hypothesis, but can rarely definitively prove the hypothesis to be true.
Results of an experiment that do not support the hypothesis can be said to disprove the hypothesis.
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WALT: differentiate the three types of variables
Slide 21 - Slide
B. Designing an Experiment so that Results are Reproducible
You are going to have to design an experiment so that:
you can control the all the possible variables
the results are reliable (can be reproduced).
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Slide 22 - Slide
Typical Variables in Chemistry
nature of a substance
concentration
volume
mass
temperature
pressure
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stirring rate
particle size
time
electrical current
voltage
WALT: differentiate the three types of variables
Slide 23 - Slide
Sample applications in Chemistry
A student wants to design an experiment to see if more salt can be dissolved in hot water than cold water.
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What are some of the possible variables in this experiment?
What are the quantities that could change in this experiment?
WALT: differentiate the three types of variables
Slide 24 - Slide
Sample applications in Chemistry
A student wants to design an experiment to see if more salt can be dissolved in hot water than cold water.
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Nature of the salt (What salt is it? Is it sodium chloride, or potassium chloride, etc?)
Purity of the salt (if lots of impurities are present they might effect the results of the experiment)
Purity of the water (once again, impurities in the water might effect the results of the experiment)
Amount of the salt used (the amount of salt used may effect how long it takes to dissolve and how much dissolves)
Amount of water used (the amount of water used may effect how much salt can be dissolved)
Temperature (of the salt, of the water, of the salt water solution)
Pressure (atmospheric pressure, pressure in a closed vessel etc)
Rate at which the salt is added to the water
Rate at which the salt is stirred into the water
Size of salt particles (is the salt first ground to a fine powder, is it in cubes, etc ?)
Time (how long are you going to observe the process for?)
Slide 25 - Slide
Independent variable
the variable that the Chemist decides to change
When the Chemist changes this variable, he/she will then observe the effect of this change on one of the other variables
Variable X
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WALT: differentiate the three types of variables
Slide 26 - Slide
Study the situations below.
A student wants to design an experiment to see if more salt can be dissolved in hot water than cold water.
A student wants to design an experiment to see if more sodium chloride can be dissolved in water than potassium chloride can be dissolved in water.
A student wants to design an experiment to see if more salt can be dissolved in a large amount of water than in a small amount of water.
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WALT: differentiate the three types of variables
Slide 27 - Slide
Dependent variable
the quantity that responds to the change the Chemist has caused
the variable that is observed to respond when the Chemist changes the independent variable
Variable Y
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WALT: differentiate the three types of variables
Slide 28 - Slide
Study the situations below.
A student wants to design an experiment to see if more salt can be dissolved in hot water than cold water.
A student wants to design an experiment to see if more sodium chloride can be dissolved in water than potassium chloride can be dissolved in water.
A student wants to design an experiment to see if more salt can be dissolved in a large amount of water than in a small amount of water.
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WALT: differentiate the three types of variables
Slide 29 - Slide
Constant variable
All the other quantities in the experiment that could change but the Chemist keeps at constant values to ensure the experiment is a fair test.
After the Chemist has decided which variable will be the independent variable, and which variable is the dependent variable in the experiment, all the other variables must be held constant.
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WALT: differentiate the three types of variables
Slide 30 - Slide
Study the situation below.
A student wants to design an experiment to see if more salt can be dissolved in hot water than in cold water.
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WALT: differentiate the three types of variables
The constant variables, which must not change during the experiment, are all the other variables. What are the constant variables in the investigation above?
Slide 31 - Slide
Nature of the salt: only sodium chloride will be used for each experiment
Purity of the salt: the sodium chloride will be taken from the same jar of reagent each time and a clean, dry, spatula will be used to transfer the sodium chloride to the water
Purity of the water: collect distilled water in a clean, dry, bottle and use water only out of that bottle during the experiment
Amount of water: Use 50.00 mL of water in each experiment
Pressure: Conduct all the experiments in vessels open to the atmosphere so that the pressure is the same as atmospheric pressure in the laboratory (record this pressure)
Stirring rate: If you don't stir the salt into the water to dissolve it, the stirring rate will always be 0, but if you do want to stir the salt into the water, you will need to use a mechanical stirrer and ensure the rate of stirring is always the same
Size of the sodium chloride particles: You could use 1 cm3 cube of sodium chloride, or you could assume that all the particles that come out of the reagent jar are the same (you could place a spatula full of the sodium chloride under a binocular microscope and see if the particles are all about the same size).
Time: must be long enough for the dissolving process to be completed for all the experiments
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WALT: differentiate the three types of variables
Slide 32 - Slide
B. Designing an Experiment so that Results are Reproducible
Controlling Variables
Reduce the number of factors that can change during the experiment.
Make a list of all the variables that you can think of that could affect the results of the experiment before doing the investigation.
Identify your independent variable.
Identify your dependent variable.
Control ALL the other variables so that they do not change during the experiment.
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Slide 33 - Slide
The Aim of the Investigation
The aim of an experiment can often tell us which variable is the independent variable and which variable is the dependent variable.
Any other variable must be a constant variable.
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WALT: differentiate the three types of variables
Example - Cause and Effect Investigation
Aim: To determine the effect of variable x on variable y
Aim: To determine the effect of temperature on the mass of sodium chloride dissolving in water.
Slide 34 - Slide
Slide 35 - Slide
Slide 36 - Slide
Use the template given to plan for the investigative project.
Collect ideas from all members of your team.
Begin writing the required sections in the plan.
Submit your work for correction and possible modifications.
Project Plan for Semester One
30 August 2023, Wednesday
timer
30:00
WALT: Write a plan of a practical investigation project following the format given
Slide 37 - Slide
GROUP 1
Khea MolVinnika
Pring Solita
Sea Noreak Puthesak
Sovannary Patheany
Hem Kimhouy
Project Groupings
30 August 2023, Wednesday
GROUP 2
Yin Sereyratanak Rithya
Chin Chanthonary
Ung Sokharita
Oeng Viya Vortey
Meng Kimhorng
Slide 38 - Slide
docs.google.com
Slide 39 - Link
Self-Assessment for Learning
30 August 2023, Wednesday
T O D O:
Identify two ideas you do not understand quite well in our sessions.
Ask someone who can explain and write the explanations in your notebook.
Verify your learning from a classmate by sharing it with the teacher.