Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Investigation of heat, specifically with water and salt


Mini-experiment 1: Investigation of heat, specifically with water and salt

Background
I remember my mother always telling me that salt makes water boil quicker, but I always wondered why that was.  In class we have briefly investigated the specific heat of water and how the addition of salt changes the specific heat.  When salt is spread over snow and ice, it melts faster or it lowers the specific heat.  Although I am pretty certain that the water will boil quicker when salt is present, I want to investigate the variance. This will be tested by comparing the boiling time of each separate scenario. 

Hypothesis: There will be a decrease in boiling time between water with salt added and without salt added. 

Null hypothesis: there will not be a significant difference in boiling time between water with salt added and without salt added. 

Independent variable: whether the water has salt added or not.
Dependent variable: time to boil. 

I will standardize:
·         -the salt added (1 Tbs)
·         -the amount of water (6 cups)
·         -the heat (high)
·         -pot (same)
·         -the initial temperature of the water (13° C)

Results



Trial 1
Trial 2
Trial 2
Time to boil w/salt
789
808
795
Time to boil w/out salt
810
814
809


With salt
Without salt
Average
797.3 seconds
811 seconds
Standard Deviation
9.712535
2.645751
SEM
5.607535
1.527525


With a p-value of .08, the data supports the null hypothesis that salt does not have a cause a significant decrease in time to boil.  The limitations from this experiment would arise from possible human error in terms of measuring when the pot was “boiling”.  It is tough to stop the time as soon as the water seems to be boiling.  Also, I did not stir the salt into the water so it did not dissolve in the solvent before I heated the pot. 
 
Discussion
The null hypothesis was supported that the salt would not cause a significant decrease in the boiling time of water.  Although salt is accepted to lower the specific heat of water and has been shown through salting streets and prior research, in this particular setting it did not show a significant change.  This experiment would be more accurately observed and analyzed if there were two identical pots being heated simultaneously.  This way, the level of boiling would be able to be recognized more accurately.  It was hard to tell the level of boiling for each trial, but if there were multiple being heated simultaneously it would be easier to compare between them as they heat.  This experiment would be interesting to run with different salt concentrations at different water volumes; that way an optimal salt to water ratio could be examined. 

Pictures


Ready to boil!

Water with salt

Materials 

 


3 comments:

  1. Hey Pat! I loved this experiment. We both had the same question when our mothers added salt to the water. I found your data to be interesting. I actually assumed that the water would definitely boil faster but I guess I should now read up on the subject. I definitely think you should try this using two of the same pans at the same time. This may help you clarify which one went faster. I also wonder if sometime you could test out the materials of pans and see if that has an affect. Great job on your project!

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  2. Pat,
    What a cool idea! When I was thinking of an idea to do all that kept popping into my head was to do an experiment on food. You took a whole new approach very out of the box in my opinion and simple. Your results were extremely accurate as well and the graphs were easy to read. In comparison with other experiments I have looked at, yours seems to be the closest in regard to the results you obtained. But despite the closeness your hypothesis proved to be supported so high five for that one there.
    Overall, my interest was kept through out the experiment and I learned a few things to improve upon for my own experiments.
    Way to Go !
    Sarah.

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  3. Hi Pat,
    It is always good to do an experiment with information we learned about in class. Your explanation of the specific heat and the way salt and water react together were both thing we discussed in class. Interesting conclusion to your experiment, the salt water did end up boiling faster but not enough to be a significant difference. It would be interesting to see if different brands of salts made the water boil even faster.
    -TC

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