Lab Report Assistant
Purpose: The purpose of this experiment was to determine melting and boiling points of certain substances.
Procedure: For this experiment, I collected different substances, heated them, boiled them, and observed them while recording data.
Conclusion: From this experiment, I learned that different substances have different boiling points and that the boiling/melting point of a substance can tell you about its identity.
Exercise 1: Determination of a Melting Point
Data Table 1. Melting Point of Tetradecanol.
Melting Point of Tetradecanol (°C)
Trial 1
38
Trial 2
39
Trial 3
40
Average of the 3 Trials
39
Questions
A. Describe your results for the melting point of tetradecanol. Were your results consistent? What was the range of values? My results remained fairly consistent and my values only ranged from 38-40 degrees Celsius.
B. Describe what occurs to the particles of a substance when the substance melts. Explain why this occurs. As a substance melts, the bonds begin to lose their strength and in turn, the substance turns into a liquid.
C. When performing this experiment, when is the tetradecanol in a condensed phase? Explain your answer. In this experiment, tetradecanol is in a condensed phase when it is a solid/going into the liquid stage. This must be due to the fact that the molecules are really close together.
D. Based on your observations of tetradecanol when it reformed a solid after melting, does tetradecanol form a crystalline or amorphous solid? Explain the difference between these two terms as part of your answer. I do not think tetradecanol is a crystalline solid because those kinds of solids usually go back to their solid form, from liquid the liquid form, in a very long time. This is not what happened. I believe it is a amorphous solid because it went back to a solid almost immediately.
E. Give some examples of how it might be useful to know the melting or boiling points of a substance. Think in terms of both scientific and commercial/industrial settings. Melting and boiling points are very important to know. For example, in commercial industries, like when jewelry is made, it is beneficial to know the melting points of the metals so they will be able to melt, and form the metals not jewelry. In a scientific point of view, it is important to know for safety and hazardous reasons.
F. Describe any possible sources of error for this exercise. Sources in error could include reading the thermometer incorrectly, setting the experiment up incorrectly, or not allowing things to heat for the time allowed.
Exercise 2: Temperature and Phase Changes
Data Table 2. Temperature and Observations for Heating Curve.
Time (Min)
Temperature (°C)
Observations
0
0
Starting point
1
6
Starting to change form around 25 seconds
2
9
70 percent liquid
3
15
90 percent liquid
4
30
100 percent liquid
5
55
Bubbles beginning to form
6
72
7
90
bubbling
8
99
Starting to boil really quickly
9
100
Beginning to steam
10
100
Condensation and steam forming
11
100
Condensation and steam forming
12
100
Condensation and steam forming
13
100
Condensation and steam forming
14
100
Condensation and steam forming
15
100
Condensation and steam forming
16
100
Condensation and steam forming
17
100
Condensation and steam forming
18
100
Condensation and steam forming
19
100
Condensation and steam forming
20
101
Still boiling
21
102
Still boiling
22
101
Less water, a lot of steam
23
100
Less water a lot of steam
24
100
Less water a lot of steam
25
101
Condensation and steam
26
101
Condensation and steam
27
100
Condensation and steam
28
101
Liquid getting less and less, steam
29
101
Steam and condensation
30
100
Almost no liquid, steam