Activity: Making Homemade Lava Lamps Homemade vs. Store Bought Lava Lamps What’s the Difference?...

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Activity: Making Homemade Lava Lamps Homemade vs. Store Bought Lava Lamps What’s the Difference? By Grant Larson, Josseline Acosta, Molly Baldwin, and Khalil Bingamon Lesson Overview and Reflection Product: Lava Lamps Essential Question: What's better, store bought or homemade? Story Narrative: Lava Lamps are inspiring. Assessment Used: Reflection: Store Bought: Store bought lava lamp ingredients are trade secrets of the chain manufacturing them, but the original lava lamps lava was made with Paraffin. Paraffin is a type of wax that is a hydrocarbon, meaning that it is made up of Hydrogen and Carbon. Paraffin is less dense than water when it is in both solid and liquid forms. In other words, paraffin will float in water no matter how hot ND MELTED OR COLD AND SOLID IT is. So the paraffin is mixed with chlorine to increase the density. To make it just a little denser than water. Paraffin has a very low melting point, so when it is slightly heated up it will get bigger or expand causing it to float. When you use a lava lamp there is a light bulb that turns on and heats up the paraffin. When the paraffin is away from the light bulb it cools down and shrinks up making it more dense. It then floats down. After that is done it starts over again. Home Made: First you fill most of the bottle with vegetable oil then you add some food coloring to get the color, make sure to leave room at the top of the bottle. Drop a alkaseltzer, then it will release CO2 gas making the vegetable “lava” move around. REFERENCES “How to make a lava lamp” instructables.com publisher: instructables.com 4/12/13 “Historical Timeline” lavalamps.com publisher: lavalamps.com 4/12/13 “The World’s Easiest Lava Lamp” publisher: sciencebob.com 4/15/13 “So where is that lava lamp now?” publisher: New York Times 4/15/13 “Lava Lamps” publisher: Chemical engineering news 4/15/13 Grant Larson is a sophomore student at HTHI and plays varsity baseball. Molly Baldwin is a sophomore student at HTHI and is on the varsity swim team. Josseline Acosta is a sophomore student at HTHI and likes to hangout with friends. Khalil Bingmon is a sophomore student at HTHI and likes to play basketball. Materials 16.9 fl. oz. Water Bottle 12 fl. Oz. Vegetable Oil Alka-Seltzer tablets • Water Store bought lava lamp What to do Pour 12 fl. Oz. of vegetable oil into the water bottle Then pour some food coloring Drop an alka-seltzer Be amazed This activity is intended for anyone in middle school through high school. (3) (4 fl. oz.) (3 drops) (2) Activi ty: Our 3 Big Ideas Show homemade and store bought lava lamps Have people make homemade lava lamps Have people use a homemade lava lamps How this Activity Demonstrates t When the store bought and homemade lava lam are shown, people can see the difference betwe them and see which ones they like to have in t homes, if any. It will show people how easy it is to make homemade lave lamp and see what it takes to ma a store bought lava lamp. It will show people how difficult it is to to make a store bought lava lamp and how preci has to be to work. Also how expensive it will being and how cheap a homemade one will be

Transcript of Activity: Making Homemade Lava Lamps Homemade vs. Store Bought Lava Lamps What’s the Difference?...

Page 1: Activity: Making Homemade Lava Lamps Homemade vs. Store Bought Lava Lamps What’s the Difference? By Grant Larson, Josseline Acosta, Molly Baldwin, and.

Acti vity:Making Homemade Lava Lamps

Homemade vs. Store BoughtLava Lamps

What’s the Difference?By Grant Larson, Josseline Acosta,

Molly Baldwin, and Khalil Bingamon

Lesson Overview and ReflectionProduct: Lava LampsEssential Question: What's better, store bought or homemade?Story Narrative: Lava Lamps are inspiring.Assessment Used: Reflection:Store Bought:Store bought lava lamp ingredients are trade secrets of the chain manufacturing them, but the original lava lamps lava was made with Paraffin. Paraffin is a type of wax that is a hydrocarbon, meaning that it is made up of Hydrogen and Carbon. Paraffin is less dense than water when it is in both solid and liquid forms. In other words,

paraffin will float in water no matter how hot ND MELTED OR COLD AND SOLID IT is. So the paraffin is mixed with chlorine to increase the density. To make it just a little denser than water. Paraffin has a very low melting point, so when it is slightly heated up it will get bigger or expand causing it to float. When you use a lava lamp there is a light bulb that turns on and heats up the paraffin. When the paraffin is away from the light bulb it cools down and shrinks up making it more dense. It then floats down.After that is done it starts over again. Home Made:First you fill most of the bottle with vegetable oil then you add some food coloring to get the color, make sure to leave room at the top of the bottle. Drop a alkaseltzer, then it will release CO2 gas making the vegetable “lava” move around.

REFERENCES

“How to make a lava lamp” instructables.com publisher: instructables.com 4/12/13“Historical Timeline” lavalamps.com publisher: lavalamps.com 4/12/13“The World’s Easiest Lava Lamp” publisher: sciencebob.com 4/15/13“So where is that lava lamp now?” publisher: New York Times 4/15/13“Lava Lamps” publisher: Chemical engineering news 4/15/13

Grant Larson is a sophomore student at HTHI and plays varsity baseball.Molly Baldwin is a sophomore student at HTHI and is on the varsity swim team.Josseline Acosta is a sophomore student at HTHI and likes to hangout with friends.Khalil Bingmon is a sophomore student at HTHI and likes to play basketball.

Materials• 16.9 fl. oz. Water Bottle• 12 fl. Oz. Vegetable Oil• Alka-Seltzer tablets• Water• Store bought lava lamp

What to do • Pour 12 fl. Oz. of vegetable oil into the water bottle• Then pour some food coloring • Drop an alka-seltzer• Be amazed

This activity is intended for anyone in middle school through high school.

(3) (4 fl. oz.)

(3 drops) (2)

Activity:Our 3 Big Ideas• Show homemade and store bought lava lamps• Have people make homemade lava lamps• Have people use a homemade lava lamps

How this Activity Demonstrates them• When the store bought and homemade lava lampsare shown, people can see the difference between them and see which ones they like to have in their homes, if any.• It will show people how easy it is to make ahomemade lave lamp and see what it takes to make a store bought lava lamp.• It will show people how difficult it is to even tryto make a store bought lava lamp and how precise ithas to be to work. Also how expensive it will end upbeing and how cheap a homemade one will be