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Inamdar, Shaukatali N.; Bhat, Mohsin A.; Haram, Santosh K. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2009
A reference electrode is one of the prerequisites of electrochemical investigations. Many electrodes are commercially available but are expensive and prone to accidental breakage by students. Here we report a simple, easy-to-fabricate, inexpensive, reliable, unbreakable, and reproducible Ag/AgCl reference electrode. The empty barrel of a…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Chemical Engineering, Laboratory Equipment, Laboratory Experiments
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Russo, D.; Fagan, R. D.; Hesjedal, T. – IEEE Transactions on Education, 2011
The University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, Canada, is home to North America's first undergraduate program in nanotechnology. As part of the Nanotechnology Engineering degree program, a scanning probe microscopy (SPM)-based laboratory has been developed for students in their fourth year. The one-term laboratory course "Nanoprobing and…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Engineering, Foreign Countries, Laboratory Experiments
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Ashkenaz, David E.; Hall, W. Paige; Haynes, Christy L.; Hicks, Erin M.; McFarland, Adam D.; Sherry, Leif J.; Stuart, Douglas A.; Wheeler, Korin E.; Yonzon, Chanda R.; Zhao, Jing; Godwin, Hilary A.; Van Duyne, Richard P. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2010
In this activity, students use a model created from a coffee cup or cardstock cutout to explore the working principle of an atomic force microscope (AFM). Students manipulate a model of an AFM, using it to examine various objects to retrieve topographic data and then graph and interpret results. The students observe that movement of the AFM…
Descriptors: Measurement Techniques, Science Instruction, Science Activities, Molecular Structure
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Bradley, Joan; Farland-Smith, Donna – Science Teacher, 2010
Allowing a student to "see" through touch what other students see through a microscope can be a challenging task. Therefore, author Joan Bradley created three-dimensional (3-D) models with one student's visual impairment in mind. They are meant to benefit all students and can be used to teach common high school biology topics, including the…
Descriptors: Visual Impairments, Teaching Models, Laboratory Equipment, Biology
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Gagnon, Michel – Physics Education, 2011
Mainly used in the 1960s, bubble chambers played a major role in particle physics. Now replaced with modern electronic detectors, we believe they remain an important didactic tool to introduce particle physics as they provide visual, appealing and insightful pictures. Sadly, this rare type of detector is mostly accessible through open-door events…
Descriptors: Simulation, Mechanics (Physics), Computer Software, Science Instruction
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Aydin, Suleyman – Educational Research and Reviews, 2011
Science lessons taught via experiments motivate the students, and make them more insistent on learning science. This study aims to examine the effects of cooperative learning on students' academic achievements and their skills in identifying laboratory equipments. The sample for the study consisted of a total of 43 sophomore students in primary…
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Cooperative Learning, Laboratory Equipment, Teaching Methods
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Phuapaiboon, Unchada; Panijpan, Bhinyo; Osotchan, Tanakorn – Physics Education, 2009
This study was conducted to examine the results of using a low-cost hands-on setup in combination with accompanying activities to promote understanding of the contact mode of atomic force microscopy (AFM). This contact mode setup enabled learners to study how AFM works by hand scanning using probing cantilevers with different characteristics on…
Descriptors: Nuclear Physics, Science Instruction, Hands on Science, Science Activities
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Vitz, Ed – Journal of Chemical Education, 2010
A handheld digital microscope (HDM) interfaced to a computer with a presentation projector is used to project an out-of-focus yellow patch on the screen, then the patch is brought into focus to show that, paradoxically, there are red and green but no yellow pixels. Chromaticity diagrams are used to discuss this observation and spectroscopic…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Laboratory Equipment, Spectroscopy, Handheld Devices
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Santillo, Michael F. – Physics Teacher, 2009
Many students (as well as the general public) use modern technology without an understanding of how these devices actually work. They are what scientists refer to in the laboratory as "black boxes." Students often wonder how physics relates to the technology used in the real world and are interested in such applications. An example of one such…
Descriptors: Information Technology, Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Principles
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Herz, Lori; Russo, M. Jean; Ou-Yang, H. Daniel; El-Aasser, Mohamed; Jagota, Anand; Tatic-Lucic, Svetlana; Ochs, John – Advances in Engineering Education, 2011
The undergraduate Bioengineering Program at Lehigh University was established as part of the university's Bioscience and Biotechnology Initiative with support from the National Science Foundation through a grant from its Division of Engineering Education and Centers (EEC). The objective here is to describe the program development and…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Study, Engineering Education, Biotechnology, Program Descriptions
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Caplan, George M. – Physics Teacher, 2009
Utility companies generate three-phase electric power, which consists of three sinusoidal voltages with phase angles of 0 degrees, 120 degrees, and 240 degrees. The ac generators described in most introductory textbooks are single-phase generators, so physics students are not likely to learn about three-phase power. I have developed a simple way…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Physics, Energy, Science Laboratories
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Jack, Jordynn – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2009
Robert Hooke's "Micrographia" (1665) holds an important place in the history of scientific visual rhetoric. Hooke's accomplishment lies not only in a stunning array of engravings, but also in a "pedagogy of sight"--a rhetorical framework that instructs readers how to view images in accordance with an ideological or epistemic program. Hooke not…
Descriptors: Laboratory Equipment, Visual Aids, Rhetoric, Cognitive Structures
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Brown, D. S. – Physics Education, 2009
The Sun's atmosphere is a highly structured but dynamic place, dominated by the solar magnetic field. Hot charged gas (plasma) is trapped on lines of magnetic force that can snap like an elastic band, propelling giant clouds of material out into space. A range of ground-based and space-based solar telescopes observe these eruptions, particularly…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Astronomy, Scientific Principles
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Haverkamp, Richard G. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2009
A small mechanical device, the atomic force microscope, measuring a force and the distance over which this force is applied, can be used on a single polysaccharide molecule to obtain the Gibbs energy of a conformational change within the polysaccharide. This well-defined conformational change within certain types of polysaccharide molecules is…
Descriptors: Thermodynamics, Chemistry, Scientific Concepts, Laboratory Equipment
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Machorro, Roberto; Samano, E. C. – Physics Teacher, 2008
This paper describes an enjoyable, simple, and inexpensive way to perform Young's two-source experiment using sound waves. The wave source is a simple aluminum rod (a "singing rod").
Descriptors: Physics, Acoustics, Scientific Principles, Science Instruction
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