Energy: A Rough Guide For Teachers: Part 1 The Issues
Energy: A Rough Guide For Teachers: Part 1 The Issues
Energy: a Rough Guide for Teachers 3. The full scientific concept of energy is remarkably sophisticated. A science student will go on extending her or his idea of energy throughout school and university. But teachers need to know more than they will tell students, to see where an idea will head in the future. The Rough Guide is in two remaining parts. The next part is about ways of setting about teaching about energy, starting from everyday commonsense thinking. A final part is about fundamentals: about what energy is, and its role in scientific thought. The second part, though not for students at all, does however contain the reasons for the suggested practical solutions in the first part.
Energy: a Rough Guide for Teachers have the number of joules delivered. Heating a kettle of water to boiling point takes about 0.5 MJ, for example. Leaving a 100 W lamp on for 3 hours uses a bit more than 1 MJ. Its worth comparing this with the amount of energy provided by a single meal. Energy of foodstuffs can now be measured, as well as read off the packet. Your present scheme of work probably has an experiment burning a foodstuff (it used to be peanuts) to heat water. Previous work with a kettle will have shown that it takes about 4.2 kJ to warm 1 kg of water by each degree Celsius. This is the quantity of energy also known as one Calorie. So students can learn how the data on food labels can be obtained. The teaching trick here is to avoid calculating energy exchanges from electrical equations (volts times amps), but to use the stated power of electrical appliances instead, together with a clock, to measure energy supplied. A Joule meter is a useful extra device (its essentially the same as the domestic electricity meter). One that makes an audible click or visible flash for every joule passing is a valuable reminder of the meaning of rate of flow of energy. Notice the early importance of power (in watts) as well as of energy (in joules). Most important or interesting things about energy have to do with energy on the way in or out, not with the amount just sitting there. Thats why the rate at which energy is shifted needs to be brought in early (see above, about food and diet). Household fuel bills Collect from the class examples of household fuel bills: gas, electricity, oil. They can show how much energy is consumed in the home, and give pointers to where savings might be made. It is actually a very helpful fact that there are different kinds of fuel. The fuel bill for gas tells you how many cubic metres of gas you have burned. The bill for oil tells you how many litres of heating oil has been put in your tank. The electricity bill tells you how many kilowatt hours you have consumed. But all of them also convert these amounts to a common unit: say mega joules. [Note that 1 kW hour is 3.6 MJ] The fact that all fuel uses can be expressed in a common unit reflects the deeper fact that fuel sources are interchangeable as far as energy is concerned. Heating a bath full of water by burning oil or by using electricity uses the same amount of energy for the water, even though the two methods may waste different amounts by letting energy leak elsewhere. There are teaching resources for estimating energy savings, for example by how much loft insulation can reduce the rate of energy leakage through the roof of a house. The teaching trick is to use the units for electricity supplies to give the units for energy and power: Power = rate of supply of energy 1 watt = 1 joule per second 1 kW = 1000 J per second (1 kJ per second) 1 MW = 1 MJ per second = 1000 kJ per second 4
Energy: a Rough Guide for Teachers This calls for some work with the labels on a variety of electrical appliances. Each has its power on the label (even your computer). One can compare kettles, electric irons, refrigerators, washing machines, ovens, hair driers etc.
Energy: a Rough Guide for Teachers Promise the class that you can lift a student in the air with one finger. Bring out a long plank, pivoted near one end, stand the student at that end and push down with one finger on the other end. You can magnify a force. Levers like this do it (of course the weight of the plank also helps!). But magnifying the force comes at a price. The distance you can move something with that bigger force becomes less. Other practical examples illustrate the point: screwdrivers, spanners, car jacks, pulley blocks and tackle. [Visits to a garage and a hardware shop can provide much useful real-life kit at reasonable cost. Machines are best when they can do a real job of work. Dont forget bicycle gears too.] You always find that the output force multiplied by the distance moved by the force (in the direction that it acts) is never more than the input force multiplied by its displacement. In ideal, well oiled situations they can be almost equal, but you never get out more than you put in. And what got put in and taken out? Answer: energy, measured by the work involved, where work is the quantity calculated from force and displacement. Shift a joule Hang a 100 g bag of beans (weight about 1 N) on a string over a pulley. Have students pull the string out by 1 metre. Say that they are feeling what it is to put 1 J into something. Try measuring energy in and energy out for some machines (use a Newton meter for the force). Friction makes hot A good machine puts out almost as much energy as is put in. But most machines waste some, because the parts of the machine rub together. But where does the wasted energy go? It goes to making parts of the machine hotter. Sooner or later youll need to tell a story about what getting hotter means, in energy terms. It just means that the invisible atoms or molecules are moving about faster. They have stolen energy for themselves. And it isnt easy to claim it back again, because they have shared it out randomly in tiny parcels amongst a huge number of particles. There are plenty of practical examples of friction diverting energy to make something hotter. Car brakes are a case where we want the energy out of the moving car as speedily as possible. Exercise bicycles let students feel how what seems a large amount of mechanical work done produces only what seems like a modest heating effect (you wouldnt want to boil a kettle with such a bike!). The key teaching point is not to let friction become a kind of excuse for things not working properly. Its the way energy delivered by moving forces gets inside matter. Energy is seen to be conserved only if you count it all The reason why it took a long time (a century or so) for people to accept that energy really is conserved is that energy of movement seems obviously not to be. Drop or throw a stone, and it soon stops moving. The warming effect on the stone or ground is small and not easily detected. And anyway, what does getting hotter have to do with moving? The answer is that being hotter amounts to having molecules moving faster. 6
This is not an intellectual story with which many younger students will sympathise. It is better to tell it much later. For now, it is better to have started with examples of energy going into heating things (kettle, burning fuel, food), and to treat this as on a par with energy visible in movement and energy transferred by displacing a force. In other words, go with how people actually talk and act today, not with historical puzzles and disputes. [There is a very pretty demonstration, however. Prepare two trolleys, each with a good spring. Show that one bounces back very well when sent against a hard massive wall. But on the second trolley, mount a small crystal model made of polystyrene balls linked by quite floppy springs. Send this into the same wall, and the trolley stops dead, with all the balls quivering. Its worth the trouble to make up.]
Energy: a Rough Guide for Teachers Grid distributes energy from a number of power stations, via the wires and cables, to homes and factories. It is often handy to think of moving matter as carrying energy, too. A strong wind delivers energy to a wind turbine. But it is equally often better to think of the moving mass as storing energy. A train has to be given energy to get it moving, and energy has to be taken from it to stop the train. This is what we call kinetic energy. Energy in hot stuff If you give more energy to be shared out amongst the atoms and molecules of some piece of matter, it usually gets hotter. But hotness is not energy. Something hot (like the surface of the Sun, or a flame in a gas cooker, rather easily gives up energy to cooler things (energy goes without help from hotter to cooler). What counts is the average energy per particle, not the total energy stored. So hot objects have, as it were, very concentrated energy that easily spreads out and dilutes, warming other things. This is what lies behind talk about heat is a form of energy. It is best to refer, as soon as possible, to the sharing out of movement energy amongst all the particles. Energy conversions So far, nothing has been said about the language of transforming energy, or of converting energy from one form to another. This is a very common way of talking, but it has its problems. Particularly, it is in danger of saying nothing at all. For example, A torch converts chemical energy in the battery to light energy. All this says is that a chemical reaction happens and light comes out. The danger is that forms of energy get labels from kinds of event, so that a process (like a torch lighting, or a ball being thrown) just gets re-described in a different set of words. Because the language of transforming energy does so little work, it is easy to teach and learn. It is not hard to get students to translate throwing a ball into muscle energy is changed into kinetic energy. But it is dangerously close to being no more than a game of words. Instead, we have talked about energy being stored or going from place to place. This puts the emphasis on where the energy is and why, not on renaming it once it goes from one thing to another. However, the really important thing is to work from very early on with actual quantities of energy, to do plenty of simple sums about amounts of energy and rates of delivery. This is where there is real payoff; where something is actually being said, and understanding has something to get a grip on.
Energy: a Rough Guide for Teachers But it is not nothing. It is roughly the mass of a microbe 1/1000 mm on a side. You could even see the microbe in a microscope. But it is much too small to be detected by simply weighing. You see why energy was not first discovered by noticing the extra weight it could give to objects. Think of it like this. Everything around us has a huge amount of rest energy (alias mass). This is like a vast ocean of energy. Floating on top, like a thin oil film, is all the extra energy that we notice, calculate, and pay for. Pretty well all the energy that we talk of in science classes belongs to this tiny extra bit. This tiny bit on top is very important for many practical purposes. But unfortunately this doesnt mean that it has a simple, clear fundamental meaning. The real meaning lies much deeper (as above). Measuring changes to the tiny bit on top is done by measuring amounts of work (force x distance, or some equivalent calculation, such as electric charge x potential difference). This is why energy has often been characterised as the capacity to do work. Nothing wrong with this statement, except that its rather opaque. Simpler perhaps to say that energy changes are measured in units of work.
Energy is conserved
Energy is conserved. What does this really mean, and why is it true? Water is more or less conserved. So the amount of water in a reservoir can always be calculated from amount that was there some time ago, plus the amount that has come in, minus the amount that has gone out (you may have to take account of evaporation as well as water drawn off). Another way of saying the same thing is that water cant be made or destroyed. For there to be more, it has to come in; for there to be less it has to go out. Energy is similar. If you take any volume of space, then the total energy inside that volume at a given time is always the amount that was there earlier, plus the total amount that has come in through the surface, minus the total amount that has gone out through the surface. Another way of saying the same thing is that energy cant be made or destroyed. For there to be more, it must have come from somewhere; for there to be less it must have gone somewhere else. This means that energy can quite correctly be thought of as rather like a fluid. You may correctly picture it as stored or as flowing. You may sensibly ask where it is, where it is going, where it is coming from. [It is not exactly like water. For example, you can measure an amount (in J) and a rate of loss or gain (in W). But you cant ask at what velocity the stuff flows, because there isnt any stuff whose particles would have a velocity. We mention this only to keep a few niggles at bay.] Why is energy conserved? Again, the modern answer is deep and surprising. If the laws governing motion are always the same from day to day  or from aeon to aeon  then there is a corresponding quantity that stays the same. This quantity is the energy. 10
Energy: a Rough Guide for Teachers Energy is conserved because time of day doesnt affect any law of motion. This result is fairly easy to state, but much harder to understand. It was discovered (with other similar principles) by the German mathematician Amalie (Emmy) Noether. Her work underlies all modern thinking about conserved quantities. So there is something very abstract about the idea of energy. It is a calculated quantity that must stay constant because there is no natural origin of time. So energy is rather like a fluid because it is conserved, not the other way round. It is a calculated quantity, not an observable stuff. The practical teaching implication here is that it is important to do sums about energy changes how much in, how much out and not just to talk generally about it. At the same time, energy is more than just a bit of mathematical machinery. Its real enough for you to be able to feel the attraction between your and the Earths rest energies.
Reactions that release energy Many reactions or physical changes release energy. This happens when weaker bonds break and stronger bonds form. A physical example is steam condensing or water freezing. A chemical example is combustion. A biological example is the release of energy from adenosine triphosphate in water. [One phosphate ion is detached and clamps hard onto a water molecule, releasing energy.] There is a tendency for such reactions to go most often in the energy-releasing direction, because the energy released can be shared out amongst neighbouring particles in many ways. To go backward enough energy would need to be collected in one place to pull apart a strong bond, and this will rarely happen by chance if the energy has to be collected from many nearby particles. Thus energy spreading out amongst many particles is part of what gives a driving direction to exothermic changes. Explosives are especially dangerous because their reactions also create many smaller particles from fewer larger molecules, as well as releasing energy. The many smaller particles can move in more ways than the fewer larger ones. So this adds to the tendency for the reaction to go in the explosive direction. Particles getting more organised It is not true that all energy-releasing (exothermic) reactions happen in the energyreleasing direction. Water freezing is a simple example. When water freezes, stronger bonds form and energy is released. But at the same time, the organisation of the molecules becomes more rigid, less random. So the molecules can be arranged in fewer ways. Whether water freezes or not depends on the balance between there being fewer arrangements of molecules and their energy because of the creation of a regular crystal structure, and there being more ways because of the extra energy shared out amongst the particles. The short way to say this is that the change goes in the direction in which the total entropy goes up. That is, in the direction in which the total number of arrangements of particles and their energy goes up. Depending on the balance, this can be in either direction. For water freezing, the balance changes over at a temperature of 273 K. Particles getting less organised Water evaporating is an example of molecules getting less organised having more space to move about in and more ways to move. That produces a tendency for the change to happen. But at the same time, to free a molecule from the liquid, hydrogen bonds have to be broken and energy has (randomly, just by chance) to arrive in sufficient amount at the right place to do so. This can happen, but not often. It happens less rarely when the water is made hotter, because each particle has more energy of movement. As a result, hot water evaporates, even though this is an endothermic (energy concentrating) change. As above, these changes go in the direction in which the entropy (number of ways of arranging the insides) goes up. In every case, simply because the molecules dont care. 12
Free energy
Free energy is expensive, not free. But it is a useful idea. Chemists and biochemists often work with the free energy change of a chemical reaction, instead of with the entropy change. The free energy change can be described in two equivalent ways: 1. it is  T Stotal where T is the temperature and Stotal is the total entropy change 2. it is the maximum amount of work available from the reaction A reaction goes in the direction in which the free energy decreases (notice the minus sign, so that this is the direction in which the total entropy increases). So free energy is a valuable commodity, which (unlike energy) is used up whenever a spontaneous change occurs. The reason gas, oil and coal are expensive is that they (with the oxygen in the air) provide a source of free energy. The everyday word fuel means pretty much the same as the scientific term free energy. So when we talk about saving energy we are talking mainly about saving fuel, that is, free energy. Similarly, food provides our bodies with a supply of free energy. This makes biochemical reactions, such as tissue building, possible. Thus what is valuable about food is not so much the energy it releases when digested, as the free energy it supplies to drive life-maintaining reactions. Muscles use free energy deriving from food to contract, so that we can do mechanical work (lifting, running, etc). Reactions in the muscles change myosin molecules so that they bend, dragging an actin fibre sideways. These reactions again involve adenosine triphosphate. Potential energy is like free energy The potential energy of a stretched spring or a lifted weight is the work needed to stretch or lift. And all of that work can be got back when the spring relaxes or the weight falls. If a stone falls on the ground, the energy is shared out amongst many molecules of the ground and stone. The entropy increases. In this kind of case, the potential energy change is the same as the free energy change. Thus the well known idea that potential energy tends to a minimum is exactly the same idea as that of free energy always decreasing. Notice that potential energy tends to a minimum only when the energy is dissipated amongst many particles (entropy increases). By contrast, in very simple mechanical examples (a ball on a spring, a planet circling the Sun) there is negligible dissipation. Energy then passes back and forth without loss, from a potential energy store to being stored in the motion (kinetic energy).
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Energy: a Rough Guide for Teachers It is no real surprise that the world is richer and more complicated than science textbooks make it appear. And it is no surprise that it takes a lot of skill, knowledge and creativity to find good ways to explain things simply to young people.
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