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Letter 22058
Copper
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I'm in grade 8 and I have a science lab 2 do! where is what i have
2 do... Do some research on one of the solids that you calculated the
density of( I picked copper).Write a short report on how the
substance is used. Include an explanation of how its DENSITY
influences its practical uses. Is the density of the solid ever
changed during an industrial process? If so, explain how and whi this
occurs. I got some reasearch on copper but the think is I can't find
if the density ever changes during an industrial process. plz help!
Keshia F.
- Toronto, Ontario, Canada
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If your question had been posted by a high school or college
student, I wouldn't answer it, I would only give hints about the
answer. But an 8th-grader will probably not have learned enough
chemistry to understand the hints :-)
The density of copper metal does not change. Each atom of copper
can be pictured as a tiny ping pong ball with a specific weight and
diameter. If you packed a cardboard box with ping pong balls, a
specific number would fit, and that specific number would weigh a
specific amount. In any given volume of copper, a specific number of
copper atoms will fit. Since the weight remains proportional to the
volume, the density is fixed.
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Ted Mooney, P.E.
finishing.com
Brick, New Jersey
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Ted's explanation is correct but does not take into account a
significant temperature change. If you take the copper block (box in
his example) from 68F to say 212F, the atoms become more active and
"spread out" a little bit. The box weighs the same, but it grew
slightly, changing the density. At the library, look up the thermal
coefficient of expansion for copper. It is not that much, until you
have a large temperature change on a large part. Copper wire conducts
less electricity as it heats up, but I do not think that it has
anything significant to do with density. One use of density would be
inserting bearings in another part by freezing them in liquid
nitrogen or a dry ice/ alcohol mixture. They will very nearly drop in
the hole and will be unmoveable as soon as it warms up. Granted, most
bearings are a copper alloy and few are pure copper.
James Watts
- Navarre, Florida
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