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Full Project Example Keep It Cool

The document describes a student's investigation into which material is the best insulator for keeping ice cold. The student tested aluminum foil, Styrofoam, a commercial plastic insulator, and no insulation. While the student hypothesized Styrofoam would work best, the results showed aluminum foil allowed the least amount of ice to melt over several hours.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
37 views

Full Project Example Keep It Cool

The document describes a student's investigation into which material is the best insulator for keeping ice cold. The student tested aluminum foil, Styrofoam, a commercial plastic insulator, and no insulation. While the student hypothesized Styrofoam would work best, the results showed aluminum foil allowed the least amount of ice to melt over several hours.

Uploaded by

ciclonevangompel
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 4

Investigation Project

Title: Keep it Cool

Testable Question: Which is the best insulator for keeping ice cold?
What I changed (Independent variable): The insulators (aluminum foil, Styrofoam,
commercial plastic insulator, and no treatment)
What stayed the same (Controlled Variables): initial amount of ice, containers, time,
location of the containers
What I measured: (Dependent variables): how much water melted from the ice over
time

Research:
I started by looking up insulators in a book at my house. The book was called How Science
Works by Judith Hann published by Readers Digest 1991. The book said that materials that
trap air like polystyrene and wool are good insulators. Metals like aluminum are good at
conducting heat. A thermos is good at keeping things cold because it cuts down on the
passage of heat in all possible ways. Inside a thermos is a flask with a double wall of glass or
plastic with a vacuum in between. The vacuum is good for stopping heat from passing through
it.
I wasnt sure if a book published in 1991 had the latest information about my topic, so I
searched the internet to see if other current scientists still agree. After searching the internet, I
found that polystyrene or Styrofoam is still good at keeping things cold.
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/ngkids/trythis/rocket_scientist/

Finally, I asked the manager at the local convenience store. He said that Styrofoam coolers
are one of his most popular products.
Hypothesis:
Styrofoam is the best insulator for preventing ice from melting.
Why I think so: I think this because my research says that polystyrene traps air and Styrofoam
coolers are a very popular cooler to purchase.

Testable Question

What is tested
(independent variable)

What says the same


(controlled variables)

Data Collected
(dependent variable)

Published by Discovery Education. 2008. All rights reserved.

Which is the best


insulator for keeping
ice cold?

The insulators (aluminum foil,


Styrofoam, commercial plastic
insulator, and no treatment)

initial amount of ice,


containers, time

how much water melted


from the ice over time

Materials:
Styrofoam
Aluminum foil
Plastic commercial product (drink cozy)
Ice 300g
Clock/timer
4 transparent plastic cups with lids
Clay
Scale for determining mass
Measuring tool for mL
Time: 1 day
Procedure:
1
Place 75 grams of ice into each of 4 identical transparent plastic cups. Cover with
lid. Cover the opening where the straw hole is with clay to make it airtight.
2
Insulate 3 of the cups with either aluminum foil, Styrofoam, or a plastic commercial
insulator. Do not put any insulation on one of the cups.
3
Wait one hour. Remove the clay and pour the water from the cup. Measure the
amount of water in each cup. Compare the amounts of water.
4
Measure and compare again every hour for 5 hours. Observe the ice and make
qualitative observations as well.

Data:
The chart below shows how much water I collected after each hour.
Page 2
Published by Discovery Education. 2008. All rights reserved.

Amount of Melted Water Collected Over Time in mL


After
After
After
After
1 hour
2 hours
3 hours
4 hours

Type of insulator

After
5 hours

Aluminum foil

5mL

20mL

15 mL

12mL

10mL

Plastic

10mL

20mL

18mL

12mL

15mL

styrofoam

10mL

20mL

11mL

15mL

10mL

none

15mL

20mL

20mL

20mL

--

Qualitative notes: As the ice cubes began to melt they stuck together. At the end of the 5
hours, there clearly was a bigger piece of ice left in the aluminum foil covered cup than in any
of the other cups.

Results and Conclusion

Melted Ice (mL)

Total Amount of Melted Ice Over Time Using 4


Different Insulators
80
Aluminum foil

60

plastic

40

styrofoam

20

None

0
1hour

2 hours

3 hours

4 hours

5 hours

Time

The results did not confirm my original hypothesis. I thought that the Styrofoam would be the
clear winner. Instead the container with the aluminum foil had the most ice left at the end of the
test. The Styrofoam came in second place, followed by the plastic and the container with no
insulation.
I wonder if my results had something to do with the procedure I used. The loose Styrofoam
that I placed around one of the cups may have let in more air than the aluminum foil that
covered the other container completely. If I had to do the experiment again, I would use a
Styrofoam cup instead of the smaller pieces of Styrofoam.
Also, since the difference between the Styrofoam and the aluminum foil was not that much,
there could have been a slight error in how much ice I measured at the beginning of the
experiment. Maybe the styrofoam cup had slightly less grams of ice at the beginning of the
investigation because some of the ice could have been accidentally dropped when moving it
from the scale to inside the cup. Maybe the ice in one of the containers began melting
together when I was measuring it at the beginning of the investigation and this affected the rate
of melting more than if the ice cubes were still cold and separate at the beginning of the
Page 3
Published by Discovery Education. 2008. All rights reserved.

experiment. My best guess for the different results is that it might have taken me too long to
measure the melted ice resulting in more air getting inside the Styrofoam container than in the
aluminum foil container.
While the results of my investigation show that aluminum foil is best for keeping things cold, I
am not confident that my original hypothesis is totally wrong. The small differences at the end
of the investigation make me think that repeating the investigation would help draw a more firm
conclusion.

Page 4
Published by Discovery Education. 2008. All rights reserved.

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