Name ______________________________ Class _____ Date _________TOOTSIE-ROLL POPS CHEMISTRY
Atoms and Chemical Formulas ActivitySUPPLIES: Group Name __________________________
Tootsie-Roll Pops
colored pencils Leader ______________________________
wrappers
arrows Supply Manager _______________________
+ signs
textbooks Reader _______________________________
Public Relations ________________________
Assistant to Leader _____________________·Select three or four partners. Name your Group.
·Decide who in your Group will be the Leader, the Supply Manager, the Reader, and the Public Relations Officer. The Leader appoints other assistants as needed and keeps the group working. The Supply Manager, or "Gopher", is the only one allowed out of their seat to get the materials the Group decides on. The Reader reads the sections of the lab aloud.
The Public Relations Officer is the only person who is allowed get up to talk to other lab groups, and the only person who can ask me the Group's Questions.·Each Group will get 1 Free Question before the lab starts and 1 Free Question during the Lab, so be sure the question that you ask me is one that you haven't been able to figure out among yourselves or between lab groups. Other questions reduce your scores by 5 points!
·Work as a group, but, as usual, each person will be turning their own lab paper.
·You will each need a Tootsie-Roll Pop.
Make sure all the flavors are different in your lab group
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If the flavors of Tootsie-Roll Pops represent different atoms or elements,
how many different combinations of Tootsie-Roll Pops can your group find?Goal: To find more combinations than the other lab groups within
3 minutes (Round 1), and within 5 minutes (Round 2).Rules: Atleast two Tootsie-Roll Pops must touch each other.
You must draw a picture of each combination below.
(Use the back of this sheet of paper if you need to.)
1. How many different kinds of atoms are represented by the
Tootsie-Roll Pops? ___________________2. How many different elements are represented by the
Tootsie-Roll Pops? ____________________3. How many different combinations did your group make? ____________
4. Do you think that any other group had the
same combinations as your group did? __________________________5. Were there other combinations your group didn't think of?___________
6. What might this activity suggest about elements? __________________
____________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________
Teacher Check ________
Page 2
WOW! There were so many combinations with the different flavors. If you had more time you could have found many more.
It seems that a few kinds of basic building blocks may be all that are needed to produce many different combinations7. Draw a picture "description" of one combination.
8. Describe this combination in words. _____________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Drawing Tootsie-Roll Pops pictures can be tiresome and
time-consuming. There must be an easier way and there is!·Unwrap the Tootsie-Pop and put it in your mouth.
·Smooth out the wrappers and mentally give each color a symbol.
Grape = G Raspberry = R Cherry = Ch
Chocolate = Cc Orange = Or·Make three different combinations using the wrappers and describe them using the color-symbols.
9._________________ 10. __________________ 11._______________
Use these symbols to describe the following combinations:
12. orange and chocolate ______________________________________
13. chocolate, grape, and cherry ________________________________14. grape, raspberry, cherry and orange __________________________
Teacher Check ____
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Part IISets of symbols like GCh, and ROrCc are called formulas. Each symbol represents one kind of atom. Every element is made of the same kind of atom, so each element has a symbol. If you have more than one of the same kind of atom in a formula, you place that number after and a little below the line to show the number of atoms.
The little number is called a subscript. (You don't need to write 1 if there is only one atom--it's understood that if there is no subscript, there is only one atom present in the formula.)·Get more wrappers or colored paper squares--at least 4 of each
"flavor".·First arrange the "atoms" in the following combinations. If there is more than one "atom", place the same "atoms" on top of each other, but make sure that you can count how many there are.
·Then, write the formulas for the following combinations.
15. 3 cherries and 5 chocolates _________________________________
16. 1 orange and 2 grapes _____________________________________
17. 4 chocolates, 2 raspberries, and 3 cherries _____________________
18. 3 grapes and 1 orange _____________________________________
Teacher Check _____
Page 4Part III
19. What is the Law of Conservation of Mass? ___________________
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
· Make the following combinations. Compare and record the numbers of "atoms" on each side of the arrow.____ Or OrR2 + CcG2 ----® OrCcG4 + CcR2 ____ Or
____ R ____ R
____ Cc ____ Cc
____ G ____ G
____ Or CcG + OrR2 ---- OrG2 + CcR ____ Or
____ R ____ R
____ Cc ____ Cc
____ G ____ G____ Or Or + Ch2 ----® Ch2Or ____ Or
____ Ch ____ Ch
____ G G + R2Ch ----® RChG + R 2 ____ G
____ R ____ R
____ Ch ____ Ch
Teacher Check ____
Page 520. What needs to be done to have these combinations of atoms obey
the Law of Conservation of Mass?
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
· Make the combinations obey the Law. You can only make both sides equal (balanced) by using whole numbers called coefficients. If you need multiples of the atom, use a coefficient at the beginning of the formula.
· Express these combinations in balanced form.
OrR2 + CcG2 ----® OrCcG4 + CcR2
CcG + OrR2 --- OrG2 + CcR
Or + Ch2 ----® Ch2Or
G + R2Ch ----® RChG + R 2In this last activity, you observed:
Plus signs show adding things (reactants) together.
An arrow shows the reactants being changed to something new
(products). It is read as "yields".
The plus signs indicate reactants if they are on the "tail" side of
the arrow, and products if they are on the "head" side.
The arrow can point in either direction (or in both directions at the same time in equilibrium reactions).
A chemical equation is an expression in which chemical symbols and
formulas are used to represent a chemical reaction. Coefficients are the only numbers that can be added to a chemical
equation and obey the Law of Conservation of Mass.
Teacher Check _____
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