The Effect of glucose Concentration in Anaerobic Respiration
Background Information:
Combustion is an exothermic chemical reaction between a fuel and an oxidant which produces heat and light.
Formula:
Fuel + Oxygen Carbon Dioxide + Water + Heat
Research Question:
Investigate if coffee products such as coffee pealing and coffee bark sawdust as well as coffee trunk are inflammable and to what extent can they be used as weapons.
Hypothesis:
We believe combustion will take place in both coffee products as ‘wood’ is a very common fuel, and the coffee plant’s woody stem if dried enough will be able to catch fire quickly and become part of a combustion reaction. Coffee peeling seems to be inflammable too as its dry complexion may allow it to be a fuel for the combustion reaction.
Fuel + Oxygen Carbon Dioxide + Water + Heat
If we replace the fuel in the reaction above with coffee stem and coffee peeling, we believe a combustion reaction will easily take place.
Variables:
Independent: coffee stem and coffee peeling
Dependent:energy produced by the combustion reaction Kj
Controlled:
- Time in which the rate of combustion will take place. (5 minutes, measured with a stop watch).
- Amount of fuel (20 ml measured with a measuring cylinder of 25ml)
Equipment:
- Matches
- 2 measuring cylinders of 25 ml
- 2 ceramic tiles
- 2 Stopwatches
- balance
- 157.1g of coffee peeling
- 157.1 g of saw dust from coffee stem
Diagrams:
Coffee Peeling Sawdust
Burning Coffee Bark Sawdust
Coffee bark and coffee peeling sawdust after combustion
Dried Coffee Trunk in combustion
Method: 1 saw dust from coffee peals
- Gather all the materials you will need to begin with your experiment.
- Grind coffee peals in coffee grinder until you have very thin sawdust
- Gather as much as 157.1g of saw dust
- Light saw dust on fire
- Clean up your area.
Method 2: Saw dust from coffee bark
- Peal off the bark of the coffee trunk to make saw dust
- place as much around 157.1g of saw dust in a Petri dish
- try lighting this saw dust on fire
- clean up your area
Method 3: combustion using coffee trunk
- grab a dried coffee trunk
- step next to a water tank
- using a Bunsen burner light coffee trunk
- rapidly dump coffee trunk inside water tank
- clean up your area
Calculations:
Weight of saw dust= weight of beaker with saw dust – weight of beaker
Weight of beaker= 99.8g
Weight of beaker with saw dust = 256.9 g
Conclusion:
Results:
Saw dust from coffee pealings did not catch on fire
Saw dust from coffee trunk did not catch on fire but did make match flame a bit stronger
Coffee trunk did catch on fire
Evaluation: