lesson 5 activity 1 explaining burning methane environmental literacy project michigan state...
TRANSCRIPT
Lesson 5 Activity 1
Explaining Burning Methane
Environmental Literacy ProjectMichigan State University
Three Questions Poster
2
Question Rules to Follow Connecting Atoms to Evidence
The Movement Question: Where are atoms moving?
Where are atoms moving from?Where are atoms going to?
Atoms last forever in combustion and living systems.
All materials (solids, liquids, and gases) are made of atoms.
When materials change mass, atoms are moving.
When materials move, atoms are moving.
The Carbon Question: What is happening to carbon atoms?
What molecules are carbon atoms in before the process?
How are the atoms rearranged into new molecules?
Carbon atoms are bound to other atoms in molecules.
Atoms can be rearranged to make new molecules.
The air has carbon atoms in CO2.Organic materials are made of
molecules with carbon atoms:• foods• fuels• living and dead plants and
animals.
The Energy Question: What is happening to chemical energy?
What forms of energy are involved?How is energy changing from one
form to another?
Energy lasts forever in combustion and living systems.
C-C and C-H bonds have more stored chemical energy than C-O and H-O bonds.
We can observe indicators of different forms of energy:
• organic materials with chemical energy
• light• heat energy• motion.
What happens when methane burns?
Remember: Atoms last forever and Energy lasts forever
What forms of energy are in the reactants?
What molecules are carbon atoms in before the change?
What other molecules are involved?
Where are atoms moving from?
What forms of energy are in the products?
What molecules are carbon atoms in after the change?
What other molecules are produced?
Where are atoms moving to?
Chemical change
Making the Reactant Molecules: Methane and Oxygen
The flame of burning methane comes when ethanol (CH4) reacts with oxygen (O2). Make a molecules of methane and oxygen on the reactant side of your Process Tool for Molecular Models 11 x 17 Poster:
1. Get the atoms you will need to make your molecules. Can you figure out from the formula for methane how many C, H, and O atoms you will need?
2. Use the bonds to make models of an ethanol molecule (CH4) and at least 2 oxygen molecules (O2, with a double bond)
3. Identify the high-energy bonds (C-C and C-H) by putting twist ties on them. How many high energy bonds does a molecule of methane have?
4. Compare your molecules to the pictures on the next slide. Are they the same?
4
Photo of reactant molecules: CH4 (methane) and O2 (oxygen)Start by making the molecules and energy units of the reactants and putting them on the
reactants side, then rearrange the atoms and energy units to show the products.
Remember: Atoms last forever (so you can rearrange atoms into new molecules, but can’t add or subtract atoms). Energy lasts forever (so you can change forms of energy, but energy units can’t appear or go away)
Reactants Products
Chemical change
Oxygen
Methane
Rearranging the Atoms to Make Product Molecules: Carbon Dioxide and Water
The flame of burning methane comes when methane (CH4) reacts with oxygen (O2) to produce carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O). Show how this can happen:
1. The heat of the flame breaks the bonds in the molecules, so their bonds can break. Now they can recombine into carbon dioxide (CO2) and water vapor (H2O). Make as many of these molecules as you can from one methane molecule and oxygen.
2. Figure out numbers of molecules:a) How many O2 molecules do you need to combine with one methane molecule?
b) How many CO2 and H2O molecules are produced by burning one molecule?
3. Remember, atoms last forever. So you can make and break bonds, but you still need the same atoms.
4. Remember, energy lasts forever. What forms of energy do the twist ties represent now?
5. Compare your molecules to the pictures on the next slide. Are they the same?
6
Photo of product molecules: H2O (water) and CO2 (carbon dioxide)Start by making the molecules and energy units of the reactants and putting them on the
reactants side, then rearrange the atoms and energy units to show the products.
Remember: Atoms last forever (so you can rearrange atoms into new molecules, but can’t add or subtract atoms). Energy lasts forever (so you can change forms of energy, but energy units can’t appear or go away)
Reactants Products
Chemical change
Water
Carbon dioxide
Comparing photos of reactant and product moleculesStart by making the molecules and energy units of the reactants and putting them on the
reactants side, then rearrange the atoms and energy units to show the products.
Remember: Atoms last forever (so you can rearrange atoms into new molecules, but can’t add or subtract atoms). Energy lasts forever (so you can change forms of energy, but energy units can’t appear or go away)
Reactants Products
Chemical change
Water
Carbon dioxide
Oxygen
Methane
9
The bottom of flame at atomic-molecular scale
Oxygen
Carbon Dioxide
Water
Methane
Nitrogen
10
The top of flame at atomic-molecular scale
Oxygen
Carbon Dioxide
Water
Methane
Nitrogen
11
What happened between the bottom and the top of the flame?
Bottom of the flame
Top of the flame
Oxygen
Carbon Dioxide
Water
Methane
Nitrogen
12
Oxygen
Carbon Dioxide
Water
Methane
What’s the hidden chemical change
when methane burns?
?
Reactants
Products
Chemical change
What happens to atoms and energy
when methane burns?
Methane
Oxygen
Water
Heat and light energy
Carbon Dioxide
13
Reactants
Products
Chemical change
Oxygen
Water
Heat and light energy
Carbon Dioxide
What happens to carbon atomswhen methane
burns?
Methane
Carbon atoms in methane become
part of carbon dioxide molecules.
14
Reactants
Products
Chemical change
Oxygen
Water
Heat and light energy
Carbon Dioxide
Methane
What happens to oxygen atomswhen methane
burns?
Oxygen atoms become part of
carbon dioxide and water molecules.
15
Reactants
Products
Chemical change
Oxygen
Water
Heat and light energy
Carbon Dioxide
Methane
What happens to hydrogen atoms
when methane burns?
Hydrogen atoms become part of
water molecules.
16
Reactants
Products
Chemical change
Oxygen
Water
Heat and light energy
Carbon Dioxide
Methane
What happens to chemical energy
when methane burns?
Chemical energy is transformed into heat
and light energy.
17
Reactants
Products
Chemical change
What happens to atoms and energy when ethanol burns?
Ethanol
Oxygen
Water
Heat and light energy
Carbon Dioxide
Atoms last forever! Energy lasts
forever!
18
Writing a Chemical Equation• Chemists use chemical equations to show how atoms of
reactant molecules are rearranged to make product molecules• Writing the equation in symbols: Chemists use an arrow to
show how reactants change into products:[reactant molecule formulas] product molecule formulas]
• Saying it in words: Chemists read the arrow as “yield” or “yields:”[reactant molecule names] yield [product molecule names]
• Equations must be balanced: Atoms last forever, so reactant and product molecules must have the same number of each kind of atom
• Try it: can you write a balanced chemical equation to show the chemical change when methane burns?
19
Chemical equation for methane burning
CH4 + 2O2 CO2 + 2 H2O
(in words: methane reacts with oxygen to yield carbon dioxide and water)
20
What happens when methane burns?
Remember: Atoms last forever and Energy lasts forever
What forms of energy are in the reactants?
What molecules are carbon atoms in before the change?
What other molecules are involved?
Where are atoms moving from?
What forms of energy are in the products?
What molecules are carbon atoms in after the change?
What other molecules are produced?
Where are atoms moving to?
Chemical change