P1 Materials - Determine the densities of a variety of objects both solid and liquid Flashcards
Aim
To measure the density of various materials
Method 1: Regular solids
- Place the cuboid on the top pan balance and record its mass in grams
- Use a ruler to measure the length (l), width (w) and height (h) of a cuboid
- Calculate the volume of the cuboid using:
Volume = l x w x h
(where measurements are in cm and the volume is in cm3) - Use the measurements from steps 1 and 3 to calculate the density of the substance
Method 2: Stone or other irregular shaped object
- Place the object on the top pan balance and record its mass in grams
- Fill the displacement can until the water is level with the bottom of the pipe
- Place a measuring cylinder under the pipe, ready to collect the displaced water
- Carefully drop the object into the can and wait until no more water runs into the cylinder
- Measure the volume of the displaced water
- Use the measurements from steps 1 and 5 to calculate the density of the object
Method 3: Water (or any liquid)
- Place an empty measuring cylinder on the top pan balance and measure its mass in grams
- Pour 50 cm3 of liquid into the measuring cylinder and measure its new mass
- Calculate: mass of liquid = (mass at step 2) - (mass at step 1)
- Use the volume (50 cm3) and the answer to step 3 to calculate the density of the liquid
Results:
Record the results in a suitable table. The one below gives some example measurements.
.
Analysis:
Calculate the densities of the different substances using:
density = ?
Convert the densities to _/_3:
density = mass ÷ volume
density of steel = 468/60 = 7.8 g/cm3
density of stone = 357/68 = 5.25 g/cm3
density of water = 50/50 = 1.0 g/cm3
Convert the densities to kg/m3:
density of steel = 7.8 × 1,000 = 7,800 kg/m3
density of stone = 5.25 × 1,000 = 5,250 kg/m3
density of water = 1.0 × 1,000 = 1,000 kg/m3
Evaluation 1
- source of error with measuring mass + improvement
The top pan balance is only precise to ±1 g. A balance that reads to 1 decimal place (±0.1 g) or to 2 decimal places (±0.01 g) would be more precise.
Evaluation 2
- displacement source of error + improvement
The displacement can may not have been set up correctly each time, so another added drop of water would cause some to dribble out of the spout before use. Check that no more water comes out before placing the measuring cylinder under the spout.
Hazard, consequence, control - displacement
Hazard = Water spilled from displacement can
Consequence = Slip and fall
Control measures = Work next to a sink and have paper towels ready to mop up any spills
There are different ways to investigate density. In this practical activity, it is important to:
(Meant to be card 1)
use appropriate apparatus and methods to measure volume and mass
make accurate measurements of the mass and the volume of different objects, and use these measurements to calculate densities