45 Minutes
8-11 years old
You may not have ever heard of the word diffusion, but you experience its effects everyday! Diffusion is defined simply as the movement of things from where they are more concentrated to where they are less concentrated. Concentrated means how much of something there is in a certain place. An example of diffusion you probably have experienced is if someone sprays perfume and you are standing on the other side of the room you will not immediately smell it. However, wait a little bit and the smelly molecules will eventually diffuse through the air to your nose!
Additionally, molecules are so small that sometimes they can even diffuse through something that seems solid, such as a balloon! Have you ever noticed that balloons lose their air over time? That is due to the air "leaking" out of the balloon or, in other words, diffusing from an area with more air molecules inside the balloon to an area with less air molecules, the outside of the balloon!
In this activity, you will observe how food dye diffuses through water of different temperatures. You will also examine how a scent diffuses through the air.
Before any scientific experiment, it is important to make predictions based upon the knowledge that you have.
Diffusion through water:
Diffusion through the air:
In the first part of the experiment, diffusion occurred in both the hot and cold water. However, you should have noticed that it happened faster in one than the other. What you observed in both cases was the diffusion of dye molecules through the water molecules; however, the difference in temperature is what made the difference! Temperature of a substance is related to how fast the molecules are vibrating. Therefore, in the hot water the molecules were vibrating faster than they were in the cold water. This causes the dye in the hot water to actually diffuse, or move throughout the water, more quickly!
A very similar thing happened with the balloons inside the shoeboxes. The scent should have been stronger inside the box that contained the warmer air. This is for the same reason diffusion occurred more quickly in the hot tap water; diffusion occurs more quickly in either water or air of a higher temperature!
http://www.biosci.ohiou.edu/introbioslab/Bios170/diffusion/Diffusion.html
http://www.schoolscience.co.uk/content/3/chemistry/materials/match2pg1.html