This is a teacher's kit filled with lessons and experiments to help students learn the science behind aerosol spray products, how they are made, and how they interact with our environment. Please contact the Consumer Aerosol Product Association: admin@aerosolproducts.org, if you have any questions.
7. Integrating the Kit
into Your Curriculum
CAPCO is aware that educators must tailor their curriculum to How it Can Fit into Your Earth or
meet State Standards Of Learning (SOLs), determined by grade Environmental Sciences Curriculum
and subject area. The CAPCO Classroom Aerosol Adventure Kit If you are investigating such topics as states of matter, atmos-
has been designed with your needs in mind and to be easily pheric science, or the environment, the activities in the Kit will
integrated into existing teaching structures and methods. It is provide support and reinforcement of existing lesson plans.
an excellent complement to basic materials. Some of the activities involve information collection, but others
focus on experimentation with what happens when gases are
The Kit’s activities get progressively more challenging as stu- compressed and how a propellant works in an aerosol product.
dents master the scientific principles of aerosol technology. The activities are particularly well-suited to incorporate into
As a teacher, it is up to you to determine which parts of the Kit Earth or Environmental sciences.
you implement and use in your classroom. There are three
basic sections:
How it Can Fit with Your Social Science
Curriculum
Section 1:
Exercises and activities in the Kit include surveying public
The first section will help you determine your students’
opinion and analyzing data from the survey. Your students can
understanding of aerosols, CFCs and the atmosphere. It
develop basic surveying skills that they can use in a number of
includes lessons and guides for teaching the material as well as
different social science contexts later on.
homework assignments and activities to introduce students to
the basic principles.
Cross-Curriculum Possibilities
It is also recommended that your class views the video, While engaged in the activities in this package, your students
“Another Awesome Aerosol Adventure,” in this first stage of will have the opportunity to work across the curriculum. In
instruction. addition to science, they will be using mathematics (measuring,
calculating, estimating, graphing), social studies (surveying
Section 2: opinion), language arts (vocabulary, poetry, designing
presentations), and graphic arts (structuring visual displays
The second section contains fun, hands-on activities that are
and layouts).
grade-appropriate and that will give your students more
in-depth knowledge of what aerosols are and how they work.
These activities present numerous exercises to further explore
the science of aerosols, and even provide a variety of cross-
curriculum options.
Section 3: CAPCO Classroom
Aerosol Adventure Kit
The third section includes labs developed by science teacher for grades 4-9
Michael Baer of South Adams JR/SR High School in Berne, • Teacher’s Guide
• Classroom Activities
Indiana. These experiments allow students who have attained a • Experiments
solid understanding of the scientific principles of aerosol and • Student Materials
atmospheric science, to take their knowledge a step further. Everything you need to teach about
They can be done at home or in the classroom. A sample lab
report is also included in this section.
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11. Teaching Materials Aerosols and CFCs
Background About
Aerosol Products:
History:
In the early 1970s, U.S. producers of aerosol products and Thousands of communities now include aerosol products in
packaging voluntarily phased out chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) both household residential and curbside buy-back and drop-off
as the propellant in consumer aerosol products. CFCs were programs. Most aerosol cans are made of steel. Aluminum
theorized to cause upper ozone layer depletion so the aerosol aerosol cans and containers are also recyclable. Check with
industry was quick to develop alternative propellants including your local recycling coordinator or aluminum collection site for
propane, butane, isobutane, nitrogen and nitrous oxide, details about recycling in your area. Many recyclers are not
depending upon the product. aware that the U.S. EPA recommends that all aerosol products
(including pesticide containers) are recycled once they are
In 1978, the U.S. government passed official regulations ban- empty.
ning CFC propellants in nearly all consumer aerosol products
produced and sold in the United States. An exception was You can help our environment by encouraging your school and
made for some unique medical uses such as inhalers. community to accept empty aerosol cans along with other
metal containers. The Steel Recycling Institute can provide
In 1987, much of the world came together to sign the more information about recycling. Call 1-800-876-7274 or visit
Montreal Protocol. Through this international agreement, www.recycle-steel.org.
more than 190 countries have agreed to ban the use of CFCs,
including their use as propellants in consumer aerosol prod- For more information on recycling in your community visit
ucts. Consumers can now be assured that “It’s O.K. to Spray!” www.earth911.org.
and consumer aerosol products do not pose a threat to the
Earth’s upper ozone layer. Inhalant Abuse:
There are some consumer products (both aerosol and non-
As a result of the Montreal Protocol, evidence that the ozone aerosols) that can be abused by “huffing.” If you would like
layer is repairing itself has recently been reported by the more information or educational materials for students or
National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). 1 adults on inhalation abuse, contact The Alliance for Consumer
Education at www.inhalant.org.
To learn more about the Montreal Protocol and how the
upper ozone layer is repairing itself, visit:
http://www.epa.gov/ozone/2007stratozoneprogressreport.html
Recycling:
Aerosol products ARE recyclable, just like any other empty steel
container!
Given the public’s concern about solid waste disposal, the
aerosol industry teamed with the steel industry to promote the
collection of empty aerosol cans in recycling programs nation-
wide.
1 Saiyid, Amena H. “Ozone Depletion, Ozone Hole at ‘Early Stage of Recovery,’ But Progress
Still Slow, NOAA Scientists Say.” BNA Daily Environmental Report, August, 2006.
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12. Teaching Materials Aerosols and CFCs
Aerosol Knowledge Questionnaire
Purpose: To find out what people know about aerosol products.
Instructions: Read each statement carefully, then tell us how much you agree or disagree with that statement by checking the box
that best fits with your ideas:
# STATEMENTS: Strongly Agree Agree Disagree Strongly Disagree Not Certain
1 Aerosol products
such as hairspray and
spray deodorants can be
bad for the environment
2 Aerosol products
are useful
3 Aerosol products harm
the upper ozone layer
4 Aerosol containers can
be recycled
5 Most of today’s aerosol
products contain CFCs
For more information and fact sheets on aerosol products and aerosols and the environment, visit www.nocfcs.org.
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13. Teaching Materials Aerosols and CFCs
Chlorofluorocarbons: FACT vs. FICTION
Read each statement and decide if it is Fact or Fiction,
then circle the correct answer.
1. Aerosol products made or sold in the United States
contain CFCs.
FACT or FICTION
2. In the United States, all aerosol products have
a “No CFC” logo.
FACT or FICTION
3. Until 1978, some aerosol products did contain
CFCs, which were linked to upper ozone layer depletion.
FACT or FICTION
4. In 1978, the federal government passed regulations to
protect the upper ozone layer and banned CFCs from
aerosol products.
FACT or FICTION
5. After 1987, many more countries joined the U.S. and
chose to protect the upper ozone layer by banning CFCs.
FACT or FICTION
6. There was a “hole” in the upper ozone layer.
FACT or FICTION
7. As a result of the Montreal Protocol, the upper
ozone layer is progressively healing itself.
FACT or FICTION
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14. Teaching Materials Aerosols and CFCs
TEACHER’S ANSWER KEY:
Read each statement and decide if it is Fact or Fiction, then cir- 4. In 1978, the federal government passed a regulation to
cle the correct answer. protect the upper ozone layer and banned CFCs from
aerosol products.
1. Aerosol products made or sold in the United States FACT or FICTION
contain CFCs.
FACT or FICTION Explanation:
In the mid-1970s many companies that produced certain
Explanation: aerosol products voluntarily removed CFCs after scientific
Consumer aerosol products in the United States do not contain research suggested that CFCs were harmful to the upper ozone
CFCs, with exception to some unique medical products such as layer. Then in 1978, the EPA and two other federal agencies
asthma inhalers. CFCs were used as a propellant in some passed a mandatory ban on CFCs in all consumer aerosol
aerosol products manufactured before 1978, but the U.S. products.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) banned CFC
propellants in the U.S. in 1978.
5. After 1987, many more countries joined the U.S. and
chose to protect the upper ozone layer by banning CFCs.
2. In the United States, all aerosol products have FACT or FICTION
a “No CFC” logo.
FACT or FICTION Explanation:
In 1987, countries around the world signed the Montreal
Explanation: Protocol and banned CFCs to protect the Earth’s upper ozone
Many aerosol products do have a “No CFC” logo to serve as a layer. Over 190 countries have signed the Montreal Protocol.
reminder to consumers. You can easily find an example of this Other countries are still working towards banning CFCs.
to show your students. However, many other product manufac-
turers to date have chosen not to put a “No CFC” logo on the
label, primarily for aesthetic reasons. 6. There was a “hole” in the upper ozone layer.
FACT or FICTION
3. Until 1978, some aerosol products did contain Explanation:
CFCs, which were linked to upper ozone layer depletion. The term “hole” is misleading. The upper ozone layer above
FACT or FICTION Antarctica experienced significant thinning, but there was never
a hole.
Explanation:
It was not until the 1970s that scientific research theorized
that CFCs harm the upper ozone layer. 7. As a result of the Montreal Protocol, the upper ozone
layer is progressively healing itself.
FACT or FICTION
Explanation:
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has predicted
that by 2060 to 2075, the upper ozone layer will be back to the
way it was prior to 1980.
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15. Teaching Materials Activity: Scavenger Hunt
Pre-Activity: Scavenger Hunt
Aerosol products are used by many people for a wide variety of Prep Time
useful purposes. This pre-activity is an investigation that will You may want to conduct your own scavenger hunt before
help students see the diversity of products that come in assigning this activity to your students.
aerosol containers and their many uses. To do this, they will
engage in a Scavenger Hunt to collect information about
aerosol products. They will focus on just three different aerosol
products, and will collect information on them using a data
chart. The information your students collect in this Pre-Activity
will be used in Activity 1: The Aerosol Collection.
Safety Considerations for the
CAPCO Classroom Aerosol Adventure Kit
PLEASE NOTE: Before your students begin this
activity, you will need to complete the Aerosol Store all aerosol products in your classroom where
Knowledge Questionnaire to establish what they they will be away from heat and risk of punctures.
already know about aerosol products. This will It is best to use cans that deliver personal care
form baseline information for comparison when products, such as shaving cream, or food products,
they have completed all the activities in this learn- such as whipped cream. Although you may not
ing package. The Questionnaire can be found at want to use empty cans, it would be best to find
the beginning of this kit. those that only have a little product left in them to
avoid the possibility of being accidentally
discharged.
What do students already know?
If you have already shown the “Another Awesome Aerosol
Adventure” video to your students, then it is reasonable to
assume that they will have a broader understanding of aerosol
products than they did before viewing it. If you have chosen
not to show the video prior to this activity (perhaps because
you prefer to use it at a later stage), then you can make even
fewer assumptions about their prior understanding of aerosol
products.
Background
Aerosol products that your students may find include spray
paint, air freshener, cleaners, disinfectants, hair spray, hair
mousse, whipped cream, deodorant, bug spray, etc.
For the lesson after the Aerosol Scavenger Hunt (Activity
1: The Aerosol Collection), students should bring in their
completed Scavenger Hunt Information Chart to share.
They will be working with the other members of the class in
small groups. They also will be drawing on the aerosol picture
poster display around the room for ideas and information for
Activity 1.
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16. Teaching Materials Activity: Scavenger Hunt
Procedure Pulling it All Together
Arrange for your students to make an Aerosol Picture Take time at the end of the Pre-Activity for students to share
Gallery by bringing in pictures of aerosol products they find in what they found in their Aerosol Scavenger Hunt. You may
their homes, in newspaper advertising supplements or in wish to have groups pool their charts so that each group
magazines. produces one composite chart. These can be enlarged to
poster size (using chart paper or poster board) and shared
Students may prefer to take photographs of their can samples with the entire class.
rather than draw them. Some may even collaborate to video-
tape their scavenger hunts. Ask your students to focus
All of the charts, whether individual or group efforts, will need
particularly on the type of delivery system the can uses.
to be brought to class for Activity 1.
A photocopy master of this information chart is included at
Stress the point that your students will be using scientific
the end of this section. You and your students may think that
processes throughout the CAPCO Classroom Aerosol
another design would do a better job. You also may want to
Adventure Kit.
design a chart using a computer program.
You may want to ask your students if they can list some of the
For the Aerosol Scavenger Hunt, you could ask your
things that scientists do when they investigate a problem.
students to take the chart home for a few days, or even a
weekend, to see what they can find out about aerosol
Collect their thoughts and make a whole class list on the
products at home or from looking through magazines.
board.
The Aerosol Picture Gallery: The aerosol drawings and
pictures from magazines that students bring in can be put
up on posters around the room. Students will need to refer
to this display later in Activity 1.
For Activity 1, students should bring in their completed
Scavenger Hunt Information Chart to share. They will be
working with other members of the class in small groups.
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17. Student Materials Activity: Scavenger Hunt
Pre-Activity:
Scavenger Hunt
Getting Started
You are going to start your investigation by going on a scav-
enger hunt to find examples of different aerosol products.
This should be done ahead of time to help you to begin your
investigation. You are going to search for examples of aerosol
products in your home, in advertisements, in magazines or on
coupons. Your teacher will help you to organize and
get started.
During the Aerosol Scavenger Hunt you will need to look
for as many different aerosol products as you can find. You may
find some in your home or in advertisements.
The Assignment
Find three different products using aerosol technology,
observe them closely, collect information about each one and
record the data on a sheet your teacher will give you. Make a
drawing of each product. Be sure to be clear and complete.
Remember to bring all your drawings and
observation information to class for Activity 1.
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18. Student Materials Activity: Scavenger Hunt
You can use this chart for recording information about the 3 aerosol products
You have found, or adapt it to suit your particular needs.
Scavenger Hunt Information Chart
Items Aerosol X Aerosol 1 Aerosol 2 Aerosol 3
(for example only)
Name of Product Whippy
Type of Product Whipped cream (food)
Metal (steel or alu-
Type of can minum? Could you test
with a magnet to find
out?)
Nozzle that gets pushed
Delivery method sideways
Contents Cream, whipping gas, etc.
Advantages Convenient, can direct
spray, stays fresh
Disadvantages Can’t see contents, cap
falls off easily, can’t be
refilled
Warnings/cautions Don’t puncture, don’t
burn, keep cool
Special notes Can can be recycled
Any other items? Lots of information
printed on can
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19. Teaching Materials Activity: The Aerosol Collection
Activity 1:
The Aerosol Collection
Prep Time
This activity is designed to introduce your students to aerosols Make a collection of aerosol products that your students can
as a topic of investigation. To do this, they will use the informa- use for this activity. It would help to enlist the aid of other
tion on aerosol products that they collected in the Pre- faculty to contribute to the class collection.
Activity, The Aerosol Picture Gallery in the room and a
collection of aerosol products that you will provide. Your Procedure
students may have a good sense of the variety of aerosol
products available for the home market. They may not, 1. You may want to take some time prior to this activity to ask
however, know that aerosol products are used in medicine, your students if they know of any types of specialized aerosol
industry, art and a number of other areas. products. Some used in dentistry, for example, have a numbing
effect on tissues. This spray lets the dentist work on a patient
This activity is geared towards younger students, and teachers without pain to the gum tissue.
of grades 7-9 may want to go directly to Activity 3.
Certain kinds of art media, such as chalks, get “fixed” onto
Your students will first be working in small collaborative
paper with an aerosol product. This keeps the chalk from
groups, and then as a whole class, to determine the key points
rubbing off later.
about aerosols: the variety of aerosol products, different ways
in which they are used and the advantages and disadvantages
of using them. After finding some key points, each group will Give your students time to think before they begin the activity.
specialize in one aspect of aerosols, using the information they Then, list on the board any specialized aerosol products they
collect to produce a poster displaying their findings. may know about.
Teaching Objectives: 2. You will be asking each group to design and make a poster
To raise awareness of the different varieties of which will inform others about their aerosol specialty. Let your
aerosol products students use their charts and posters as review guides.
To establish groundwork for further discussion
Making the posters will help the students to collect
Skills: information and focus on just one aspect of aerosol products.
Each student group then can become the “experts” in that
• Investigation, classification, discussion, creative area. They can be consulted by other groups as they build up a
thinking, organization complete picture of aerosol products.
Materials:
• Pre-Activity Scavenger Hunt sheet (page 30)
• Various aerosol can products from household
• Poster board
• The Aerosol Picture Gallery created during
the Pre-Activity
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20. Teaching Materials Activity: The Aerosol Collection
Pulling it All Together
Some ideas for the core concepts for these Take time at the end of the activity to help your students pull
posters might include:
together all their discoveries about aerosol products into a list
• Uses: clean ovens, hold hair in place, disinfect of Key Facts About Aerosol Products.
wounds, cover a surface with paint, eliminate odors, etc.
NOTE: This may be done using a chalkboard chart.
• Can materials: steel, aluminum You may also create a chart to hand out to each
student.
• Components: upright nozzles, “press-down” valves,
valves with a directional attachment, etc.
• Delivery forms: mist, streams, foams, gels, etc.
Safety Considerations
• Contents: read labels for this information For This Activity
Store all aerosol products in your classroom where
• Advantages: delivers product precisely, provides large they will be away from heat and risk of punctures.
amount of product in a small storage space, delivers It is best to use cans that deliver personal care
ready-to-use product, can be recycled, doesn’t spill, does products, such as shaving cream or food products,
not require contact with skin to apply (e.g., disinfectant), such as whipped cream. Although you may not
is air- tight, tamper-resistant, and can sit on a shelf for a want to use empty cans, it would be best to find
long time those that only have a little product left in them to
avoid the possibility of being accidentally dis-
• Disadvantages: can’t see contents, requires special charged.
handling, actuator on some products can get clogged,
needs to stay away from sources of heat, etc.
• Warnings and cautions: container can’t be punctured as it
is under pressure, must be kept away from direct heat
sources
3. The poster display: The posters can be put up around the
room and students can go on a tour to see what each of the
groups has discovered. Each touring group should take notes
on any new information they see displayed about aerosol prod-
ucts so that everyone has a common knowledge base.
4. Each group should be asked to make a short presentation
about their poster.
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21. Student Materials Activity: The Aerosol Collection
Activity 1:
The Aerosol Collection
There are many things about aerosol products that you might With your teacher’s help, post up all the aerosol product
not have noticed before. Like many things we use and see drawings to make up the Aerosol Picture Gallery. Also,
every day, there is much more to them than meets the eye. organize a display table for The Aerosol Collection.
Only when we observe them closely and ask questions do we
begin to understand more about them. In this activity, you and
your group are going to become investigators finding out
about one important area of aerosols. Your teacher will divide
you into groups, and each group will look at a certain aspect of
aerosol products. Finally, all the information will be shared and,
together with your teacher, you will make a list of Key Facts
About Aerosol Products.
Step 1
Everyone should have helped to collect data about aerosol
products ahead of time. You also will have looked for examples
of them in your home or in advertisements, magazines or
coupons, and drawn pictures of them. These drawings now
should be ready for display so that others can examine them. Safety Warning
In addition, your teacher will have collected and brought in
some actual aerosol products for The Aerosol Collection. Do not activate any of the aerosol cans, even if they
seem to be empty, unless your teacher asks you to
do so.
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22. Student Materials Activity: The Aerosol Collection
• Different types of buttons and nozzles, and why
Step 2 we need them
• Information about contents written on the cans
• Advantages of using aerosol products
• Disadvantages of using aerosol products
• Warnings and cautions and their reasons
• Directions for use
Together with your teacher, decide which group is going to
specialize in which area (or areas). Once this is decided, your
group must try to find out as much as it can about its specialist
area by:
With your group, take some time to study the Aerosol Picture • Observing real cans and drawings carefully
Gallery and your Scavenger Hunt Chart. Keep these ques-
tions in mind while you are doing this: • Noting all the ideas you have about your specialist area(s)
based on your observations
• What do all aerosol products seem to have in common?
• Agreeing on the most likely reasons for the can
• What differences do aerosols have? being the way it is
• What different kinds of products come in aerosol cans?
Now discuss these questions in your group. Make a note of the
things you have observed about each question. Record this
information on the chart your teacher has given you.
Step 3
Now your group is going to specialize in one area of aerosol
products. Here are some sample areas. If you can think of any
others, add them to this list.
• Different shapes of cans
• Range of different aerosol products
• Materials from which aerosol products are made
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23. Student Materials Activity: The Aerosol Collection
Step 4 Step 6
Now your group is going to make a poster showing what you With your teacher’s help, you are going to review all the things
have discovered about your aerosol specialty. You first must about aerosol products that you have discovered from your
decide the best way to do this so that others can easily see and investigations.
understand. Be prepared to explain your poster to others.
Because each group specialized in a different aerosol area, you
need to be sure that you understand what other groups have
done. This is your chance to ask any questions about other
groups’ areas. If you are not clear about something, ask the
specialists for clarification.
Step 7
Finally, your teacher will help you create a list called: Key
Facts About Aerosol Products.
Step 5
Each group can now
pin up its poster for
everyone else to see
and discuss.
It may be helpful if
each group, in turn,
gives a short presenta-
tion to explain the
reasons for the
information group
members have
included in the poster.
Organize a space This list will be the ideas you found during your investigation.
where the posters can As you learn more about aerosol products and the science
be left on display for behind them, you may need to revise, change or add to this
later reference. list. Keep this list for future reference (or make your own
copy). What other questions can you ask about aerosol
products?
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24. Teaching Materials Activity: The Gelatin Party
Activity 2:
The Gelatin Party
This activity will show your students how a gas can expand. It
also will let your students investigate the difference in volume
Teaching Objectives: between the contents of an aerosol product and the discharged
• To introduce the concept of pressure and amount. Using whipped cream, your students will work
propellants in aerosol cans collaboratively to measure the discharged product as it is
sprayed out of the can.
• To give students a better understanding of how
volume and pressure work together They will then record this amount and compare it,
mathematically, to the can’s volume. (Directions for finding
• To establish the use of metric units in the can’s volume by water displacement are given.)
collecting data
This will help them see the effects of putting the can’s contents
Skills: under pressure. When the pressure drops, as it does outside
the can, the volume of the contents increases. The discharged
• Investigation, measuring, collecting data whipped cream can be put to good use by having a gelatin
party as the closing event for this activity.
Materials: Your students may already have wondered at some time how
so much whipped cream can come out of an aerosol can. If
they have read the label, they will know that the contents are
under pressure. Most of them, however, will not have any real
understanding of what “under pressure” means.
This activity will help them get a mathematical sense of the
difference in volume between the contents in the can of
whipped cream and the contents when it comes out of the can.
You will build on this knowledge using later activities in this
package that will help students understand expansion and
• Whipped cream in aerosol can contraction of gases in aerosol cans.
• 4-5 10-oz beakers or graduated cylinders Background
The gas inside aerosol products, the propellant, which is
• Stack of clear 10-oz cups dissolved in the other ingredients, pushes the product out of
the can.
• Computer or calculator
There are two types of propellants used in aerosol products:
• Paper towels compressed gases, which are present only in a gaseous form,
and liquefied propellants, which are gases at room temperature
• 2 boxes of gelatin (optional) and pressure, and liquid under higher pressure. The majority
of consumer aerosol products use liquefied propellants, most
of which are naturally occurring hydrocarbons such as propane
and butane. Propellants are under pressure inside the aerosol
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25. Teaching Materials Activity: The Gelatin Party
can; outside the aerosol can, the pressure is less. In nature, as Prep Time
can be seen with air masses in the atmosphere, gases move
1. You will need to arrange for a room outside of the science
from areas of high pressure to lower pressure. In an aerosol
lab for this activity as your students will both be handling and
product, when the valve is opened, the product moves through
eating food.
the dip tube and out of the can. When it comes out into the air,
the gas expands.
2. You also need to send home a permission slip just in case
Aerosol Fact you have any students who can’t have sucrose (table sugar) or
lactose. The gelatin desserts will need to be made and chilled
CFCs have been banned in the U.S. for consumer
in advance. If the cost of the whipped cream is a problem, you
aerosol products since 1978. An exception has been
could do this activity as a demonstration, but still have the
made for some unique medical uses such as inhalers.
gelatin party for the whole class.
Your students may think that some aerosol products 3. The whipped cream and gelatin will need to be chilled
(deodorant, for example) seem to have less product than other until your students are ready to use them.
packaging forms (i.e., stick). This may be because there
appears to be empty space inside the can. In most aerosol 4. Your students will spray whipped cream into clean 10-oz
products, a small amount of space is needed to enable the plastic cups. To make this job easier, each of the students in a
product to work. This space contains the gaseous propellant particular group will have a specific job: one will be in charge
and prevents rupture or distortion of the can. of spraying, one will measure volume, one will record, and one
will collect and take back the materials. Metric measuring
Demonstration Option devices for students to copy and cut out are provided in the
back of this activity.
If your budget is limited, or you are concerned about
creating a mess in the classroom, you may want to do
the activity as a demonstration for the whole class. In Determining the Volume of a Can
this case, you can ask two student groups to do the One way to determine the volume of a can is to see
spraying and measuring for the whole class. how much water the can displaces. These are the
steps you should use:
Two groups will give enough data for comparison, but
will keep the expense and mess to a minimum (and Step 1. Fill a large container with water all the way to
you will still have enough whipped cream for the the top
party).
Step 2. Put the water-filled container in a pan to hold
the overflow which will spill over the top when you
The propellants in whipped cream are compressed gases and put the aerosol can in the water
are used to push product out of the can and to provide an
aeration effect, i.e., whipped cream. You can simulate the Step 3. Place the whipped cream can completely
action of the gas in whipped cream by whipping a pint of heavy under the water
cream for your students. This will give them some sense of
how much the addition of a gas can inflate a product. Step 4. Measure the volume of the overflow water
now in the pan by putting it in a measuring cup
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26. Teaching Materials Activity: The Gelatin Party
Procedure Your students can compare this calculated value with their
measured value from the experiment. A typical can of whipped
1. Students will do a displacement exercise to find the volume
cream has a discharged volume that is about 1.5 times greater
of the whipped cream can. They will then use their calculators
than the undercharged volume of the can.
to figure out how much greater the discharged volume of
whipped cream is than the volume of the can. They can do this
by dividing the discharged volume by the estimated can vol-
5. To whip heavy cream, place it in a chilled stainless steel
bowl. Beat it at high speed with an electric mixer until it is still.
ume. The value they get will tell them how many times the vol-
Be sure to measure the volume before and after you whip the
ume of the contents expanded when it was discharged.
air into it.
When the students are finished with the spraying and measur-
ing, it would be a great time to have them put their whipped
Pulling it All Together
cream onto gelatin for a class party. Ask students to post their results for the “before and after” can
volume on a chalkboard data chart. They also can list the val-
2. Advise your students that it would be a good idea to get ues that they calculated for how many times the volume
some sense of the volume that their cups hold (in metric units) increased from inside the can to outside.
before they start spraying whipped cream. They can tape the
measuring strip (provided at the end of this section) to the Ask your students to look for agreement and disagreement
side of a 10-oz. clear plastic cup. among the values. If you find some that are way off, ask stu-
dents to look for the causes of this. It may have been a meas-
urement error, or a calculation problem.
The top and bottom diameters, and the height of the side for
the appropriate type of cup have been provided on the photo-
See if your students can come up with logical reasons for why
copy page. If you have graduated cylinders available, then your
the volumes inside and outside are so different. What inflates
students can use these to verify the metric volumes at certain
the whipped cream so much?
heights on their 10-oz cups. This will ensure that they have the
measuring strip taped in the correct position.
If you have chosen to whip the heavy cream as a demonstra-
tion for your students, they will be able to see what the incor-
The cream won’t deflate immediately, but it has a tendency not
poration of air into the cream can do for its volume.
to keep its full volume for very long. If they have figured out
how much the cups hold in advance, that will make the meas-
uring process much smoother.
3. To provide another illustration of what happens when a gas Safety Considerations For This Activity
mixed with a product expands, you can whip a pint of heavy
Since your students will be working with and tast-
cream into a metal bowl with a mixer. Be sure to record the
ing food products, you will need to conduct this
cream’s volume, both before and after it is whipped. As you
activity outside the science classroom. You may
beat air into the cream, its volume increases greatly.
want to move to the cafeteria, a regular classroom
or the Home Economics lab. Be sure that all mate-
4. Some of your students may be able to figure out the dis- rials used for containing and eating the food are
charge volume by reading the can’s label carefully. Using the clean.
part of the label where serving size information is provided, it
is possible to figure out the discharged volume by multiplying
the serving size volume by the number of servings per can.
Two tablespoons are equivalent to one fluid ounce.
26 www.nocfcs.org
27. Student Materials Activity: The Gelatin Party
Activity 2:
The Gelatin Party
Make a Prediction
Most aerosol cans seem to squirt out a lot of stuff. It’s as if the
product you get is much more than the can appears to contain.
In this activity, you will be working with your group to investi- Before you begin investigating,
gate the difference between the volume inside a can of discuss what you think the likely
whipped cream and the volume of the whipped cream when it result will be, based on your
is sprayed. knowledge of aerosols. How
many cups do you think the
squirted out whipped cream is
Step 1 most likely to fill up?
Now make your PREDICTION
Collect all the materials for your group: and record it like this:
“My prediction is that the aerosol will deliver:”
•aerosol can of whipped cream (unused)
_______ cups, or
•spoons (one for every person)
_______ fluid ounces, or
•stack of 10-oz clear plastic cups (about 10)
_______ cubic centimeters
•metric volume measuring strip
•cups of gelatin (one for every person)
Also record the reasons for your prediction:
•paper towels
•container large enough to hold the whipped cream can
“The reasons for my prediction are:”
•pan to hold water overflow
•volume measure (such as a graduated cylinder or
measuring cup) ___________________________________________
(Your teacher will arrange for either a large ___________________________________________
ice cooler or refrigerator to be available.)
___________________________________________
___________________________________________
___________________________________________
___________________________________________
___________________________________________
___________________________________________
27 www.nocfcs.org
28. Student Materials Activity: The Gelatin Party
Step 2 Step 4
This activity moves quickly, once you start spraying and meas- You can estimate the volume inside the can this way:
uring whipped cream.
You will need to divide the work so that:
• one person is the sprayer
• one is the measurer
• one is the recorder
• one is the materials manager (gets and takes back 1. Fill the large container
materials) with water all the way
to the top.
2. Place the water-filled
container into a pan
that will hold any
overflow.
3. Hold the whipped
cream can completely
under the water.
4. Measure the volume of
the overflow from the
container by pouring it
into a measuring cup.
Step 3
Once all the materials are assembled and the recorder is ready,
set up a row of cups and begin squirting the whipped cream in,
cup by cup. It is important that each cup is filled to the same
level each time. The recorder needs to be ready to write down
the volume right away, before the whipped cream deflates.
28 www.nocfcs.org
29. Student Materials Activity: The Gelatin Party
Step 5
Compare the estimated volume of the can with the discharged
whipped cream volume.
What is the difference?
How many times greater is the discharged volume than the can
volume? ( You can find this out by dividing the discharged vol-
ume by the can volume.)
THINGS TO THINK ABOUT
• Were your results close to what you predicted?
• How far off were you?
• What do you think has to happen for the can volume to expand that much?
• Watch your teacher demonstrate how cream is whipped. What is there about this process that can help
you understand what is happening in the can?
29 www.nocfcs.org
31. Teaching Materials Activity 3: The Foaming Bottle Model
Activity 3: Your students may have seen the effects of a gas under pres-
sure when they shake up a soda bottle before opening it. The
The Foaming Bottle Model contents of the bottle rush out when opened.
This activity will let your students investigate the science of The gas that inflates whipped cream from an aerosol can is
how aerosol propellants work and help them understand how under pressure inside the can; outside the can the pressure is
the can works to deliver the product. less. When the valve on the aerosol opens, the gas carries the
product through the dip tube and out of the can. The gas
Your students will be generating carbon dioxide gas in plastic expands when it comes out into the air.
16-oz bottles to propel their product (dish detergent) out of
the bottle. The model works on the principle that a gas will It is important that you make the distinction to your students
move from an area of high pressure (inside the bottle) to an that the ingredients inside aerosol products are specially
area of lower pressure (outside the bottle). matched to be chemically compatible. In other words, they
don’t react to form other products. The ingredients that the
Teaching Objectives: students are using for their model, vinegar and baking soda, do
react to form a new product, carbon dioxide. In this respect,
• To show how gases move from areas where they the foaming bottle model does not show the chemical compati-
are under high pressure to areas where they are bility of aerosol ingredients.
under lower pressure
Demonstration Option
• To review the concept of pressure and propellants
If you are concerned about creating a mess, or
in aerosol cans
about your students investigating gases under
pressure, you could do this activity as a demon-
Skills:
stration.
• Investigation, classification, discussion, data
collection
Prep Time
Materials: 1. You will need to collect 16-oz plastic soda bottles and large
• Baking soda cafeteria trays prior to this activity. Each group of students will
• Vinegar need to have a bottle and a tray covered with a paper towel to
• 16-oz plastic bottles work on. If you don’t have sinks in your classroom, you will
• Cafeteria trays or cookie sheets need to move somewhere where water is readily available for
• Dish detergent cleaning up after each use.
• Safety goggles
2. Make sure that your baking soda has not been sitting
around the classroom too long, or you may not get the results
Background you want.
Your students probably will have heard the rush of gas as it
escapes from an aerosol can. They will know by this time that 3. Students should wear safety splash goggles for this activity.
the contents of the can are under pressure. When the valve on While all they are generating is carbon dioxide gas and soap
the can is pressed, a pathway is opened to the outside air suds, soap in the eyes is a distinct possibility without protec-
where the pressure is less. The propellant rushes out, taking tion.
the other contents of the can with it.
4. Provide plenty of paper towels for this activity.
31 www.nocfcs.org
32. Teaching Materials Activity 3: The Foaming Bottle Model
Procedure NOTE: It is up to you whether you want your stu-
dents to actually try their methods of putting
1. Your students will first collect all of the needed materials and their gas under greater pressure. The safest
cover a tray with paper towels. method is for you to mix the vinegar and baking
soda in a demonstration bottle, briefly capping
the bottle as the reaction occurs.
2. They will then put a bottle in the middle of the tray, and put
the soap and vinegar into the bottle.
7. Your students could increase the pressure of the gas inside
Note: The soap is added to the baking soda and their bottles by putting their hands over the bottles as the reac-
vinegar mixture for a couple of reasons: it acts as tion occurs, then removing their hands. Be sure everyone is
the “product” carried out of the container by the wearing goggles throughout this activity.
gas, and it makes the reaction results easier to
observe. Any household dish detergent will work
fine. Liquid hand soap, however, will not give Safety Considerations for this Activity
good results. Do not let your students put a cork or stopper into
the end of the bottle, as it could fly out and hurt
3. Allow your students a chance to make their predictions and someone.
record their reasons for them.
Students must wear chemical splash goggles for
4. Add the baking soda to the bottle. When baking soda and this activity to keep soap suds out of their eyes. It
vinegar are combined, they react to form a salt, water, and car- is also important to remind students to clean up
bon dioxide gas. The reaction happens as soon as the chemi- any spills immediately, as soap suds are very slip-
cals are combined, so warn your students to be ready! pery on the floor.
This gas, when shaken with the soap, makes the soap foam.
The foam will escape out of the bottle and onto the tray. Pulling it All Together
Remind your students to use senses other than sight to make Ask your students to share their observations of the foaming
observations during this investigation. Hearing and touch will bottle model at the end of the class period. If you choose to
both come into play when observing the baking soda and vine- allow the students to put their gas under greater pressure, also
gar reaction. ask them to share their methods for doing this.
5. You will need to set up a demonstration to show your stu- Ask your students to reflect on the foaming bottle as a model
dents what happens when you shake the bottle. By doing this of what happens inside an aerosol can.
as a demonstration, the soap suds are reduced and contained,
and you can use the opportunity to question your students How is the foaming bottle a good model? (It shows how gases
about what they think might happen, and what might be a bet- move from areas of high pressure to lower pressure. It also
ter way of going about the task. shows how the gas can carry a product out of the container.)
How could the foaming bottle be a better model? (It could con-
6. When the students have finished making their first foaming tain chemical compatible ingredients. It also could have a valve
bottle, they will have a chance to brainstorm suggestions for to control the rate at which the product is delivered.)
how they could put a gas under greater pressure before it
escapes, and then try the activity again. How is the propellant in aerosol products kept from escaping
from the can?
32 www.nocfcs.org
33. Teaching Materials Activity 3: The Foaming Bottle Model
Another reminder for your students is that in aerosol products
there is no chemical reaction taking place. This experiment
does involve a chemical reaction in the making of carbon diox-
ide.
At this point, draw your students’ attention to the fact that the
gas under pressure moved rapidly to where the pressure was
less (outside the bottle). Ask them to draw a parallel between
this and what happens in aerosol products.
Using the DVD
You may want to use the video “Another Awesome Aerosol
Adventure” at this point to illustrate or emphasize some of
the concepts that your students have been investigating. Refer
to minutes 3:20 through 6:30 in the videotape to show how
aerosol products work.
33 www.nocfcs.org
34. Student Materials Activity 3: The Foaming Bottle Model
Activity 3:
The Foaming Bottle Model
You will be working with a group of your classmates to make Step 2
and test a model of what happens when a gas moves from a
place where it is under high pressure to where it is under
lower pressure. This is what happens with aerosol products. In It is important that your team is organized for this investiga-
aerosol products, the gas inside (the propellant) is under such tion. It will take several pairs of hands to do this activity, so
high pressure when the can’s valve is opened, the propellant you will need to divide up the work so that:
rushes out to where the pressure is lower, taking the product
with it. You will be using a chemical reaction to make the gas in • one person measures
your model. This reaction is not what happens inside a real the vinegar, baking
aerosol, but it is an easy way to demonstrate how a gas behaves soda and dish
under pressure. detergent
• one person adds the
Step 1 ingredients to the
bottle
Collect all the materials for your group: • one person shakes
the bottle
• 16-oz plastic soda bottle without cap
• liquid dish detergent • one person records observations and results
• large tray
• funnel
• tablespoon measure Step 3
• baking soda
• vinegar
Everyone in the group
• paper towels
needs to put on goggles
• safety goggles
first. Cover your tray with
paper towels and put the
bottle in the middle of
the tray. Once all the
materials are assembled
and the recorder is ready,
two tablespoons of dish
detergent and three
tablespoons of vinegar
should be put into the
bottle. (The funnel will help with this.)
Rinse and dry the funnel.
34 www.nocfcs.org
35. Student Materials Activity 3: The Foaming Bottle Model
Step 4 Step 6
Put 2 tablespoons of baking soda Look over your recorded observations. Share what your group
into the funnel, but keep your fin- has found with other groups in your class.
ger over the end. Carefully put
the funnel into the bottle and See what ideas other groups have had for increasing the pres-
shake the baking soda into the sure of the gas inside the bottle. (This is carbon dioxide gas
bottle. Put your finger over the that you were making. Carbon dioxide is the same gas that
bottle and shake, then put it gives carbonated beverages their “fizz”, and is one of the gases
down in the center of the tray. used as a propellant in a small percentage of aerosol products.)
Did anyone in your class have any ideas for how to release the
Safety Warning gas and the other ingredients with a valve?
Do not place a cap on the bottle.
Things to Think About
Watch what happens to the contents. • Were your results close to what you predicted? If
Record your observations. not, how can you account for the difference?
Step 5 • How is the foaming bottle investigation like the
release of a product from an aerosol? How is it dif-
ferent?
When you finish, talk over with your group members how it
might be possible to increase the pressure of the gas inside the
• What could you do to make the foaming bottle
bottle. Discuss your ideas with your teacher. Rinse out the bot-
more like what really happens with aerosol prod-
tle and try the investigation again. Your teacher will do a
ucts? Is it possible with the materials you have?
demonstration later to show what happens when the pressure
of the gas is increased.
• What part of the foaming bottle was the propel-
Prediction Point lant? What was the product? How did the differ-
ence in pressure inside and outside the bottle
• What do you think will happen to the bottle’s cause the propellant to work? Discuss some of
contents when the gas in it is under greater these ideas with other people in your group.
pressure?
• Record your predictions and your reasons for
them.
35 www.nocfcs.org
36. Teaching Materials Activity 4: The Big Survey
Activity 4:
The Big Survey
In this activity, your students will be pulling together what they Teaching Objectives:
have learned so far about aerosol products to construct a sur- • To introduce the concept of social sciences in
vey to discover what other people know and believe about order to understand public opinion
aerosol products. Many people still mistakenly hold the belief
that “aerosol products destroy the Earth’s upper ozone layer.” • To develop an understanding of surveys and their
role in the sciences
Before the activity, your students will have worked with you to
choose their target audience for the survey. Each of them will • To build writing skills used for scientific
have been responsible for identifying five people from that documents
audience to survey.
Skills:
Your students will draw on a number of resources for back-
ground information to use in constructing their survey. Other • Creativity, data collection, investigation,
sources are the DVD and your students’ findings from the classification, evaluation, discussion, presenting
activities. Although your students will work in small groups for results
some of this activity, the survey that is finally produced will be
a whole-class effort. Each of your students will give the survey Materials:
to members of the identified target audience. The data from • Data chart
the completed surveys will be pulled together, analyzed, and • Aerosol Knowledge Questionnaire
compared to the students’ own knowledge and beliefs.
Background Prep Time
Your students have probably completed surveys at one time or 1. Give your students enough notice that they will need to give
another, or have seen survey forms in magazines or newspa- the survey to five people outside your class.
pers. What they may not have done is design and conduct a
survey. When designing a survey, it is important to be clear on
the type and quality of information that you want to collect. 2. The class as a whole will need to decide which audience
Your students first will be brainstorming, and then prioritizing they would like to survey about aerosols They may choose to
the key points on which they may want to survey their audi- work with parents, another class in their school, members of
ence. You may want to have some copies of commercial survey the community, teachers or other audiences.
forms available for your students to use as models. They may
want to focus in on the types of responses that are expected 3. Your students can use the Aerosol Knowledge
from the survey subjects. Questionnaire for ideas.
36 www.nocfcs.org
37. Teaching Materials Activity 4: The Big Survey
Using the DVD 4. The data then will be collated and organized into a data
You may want to use portions of the DVD to review chart. You will need to decide if a graph is the best way of
some of the key ideas connected with aerosol showing patterns and relationships in the data. Allow students
products. Some of the more controversial issues to post their results and see what they found. A whole-class
related to aerosol products and the environment sharing session may also be effective.
are dealt with in the video. This may help students
clarify their own ideas about what they want to 5. Ask students to post or otherwise share their results from
discover through their survey. Refer to minutes the survey. Look to see how the data naturally group them-
6:30 through 10:30 in the videotape to address selves. You may want to use percentages to show relationships,
these issues. and then turn these into a bar graph.
Procedure If you choose not to have students design their own survey
1. After pulling together their resources, your students will questionnaire, they can use the one provided at the end of this
make a list of the five most important things they think that the activity.
general public should understand about aerosol products.
There are a variety of types of survey questions that your stu-
dents could use. The important point to remember is that all of
2. Through sharing, the class will come up with a list of no
the final questions for the survey will need to follow the same
more than 10 items. They will divide this list so that each group
format for the data to be easy to compare.
gets one item to work on. Each group will write a survey ques-
tion on their item, using the format that the class has agreed
Some of the question forms include:
upon.
• Likert scale: usually a five point scale
Help your students to focus not just on one aspect of aerosol ( for example, 5 = Strongly Agree to 1 = strongly
products, but a combination of attitudes, stereotypes and gen- Disagree)
eral knowledge. Some of the items on the lists that your stu- • True/False or Yes/No responses
dents may come up with include: • Open-ended or fill-in-the-blank responses
• Multiple choice responses
• Wide variety of spray products and forms
• How the cans work The survey questions that have respondents either checking or
• Special delivery of products through aerosols circling their answers are easiest to score but limit the variety
• History of CFCs and the ozone layer of responses. Open-ended questions can provide a great deal
• Recyclability of cans of information on an item, but take a much longer time to
• Removal of CFCs analyze.
• Warnings on the label
• Delivery of a controlled dose Since your students are probably beginners in survey design,
• Advantages of an air-tight container encourage them to choose a simple type of question for this
survey.
Encourage your students to be creative as they brainstorm the
important points about aerosol products. You will need to make copies of the students’ survey forms. If
you have a student who is adept in word processing or desktop
3. After reviewing the items, you will need to print out copies publishing, enlist his or her services to lay out the survey so
of the survey for your students to distribute and collect. that it is attractive, easy to read and easily completed.
37 www.nocfcs.org
38. Teaching Materials Activity 4: The Big Survey
When the data are all collated from the survey, make up a
whole-class chart with your students to display what they
found. They will be comparing these data with what they them-
selves thought about aerosol products during the Aerosol
Knowledge Questionnaire.
Pulling it All Together
When your students have completed their survey analysis, take
time to let them complete the Aerosol Knowledge
Questionnaire. When they have completed that, re-distribute
their questionnaire results from the beginning of the program.
Let them compare what they knew and believed then with
their current knowledge and attitudes.
Then ask your students to compare their answers with their
survey results.
How similar are the survey results to their answers before com-
pleting the activities in this kit? How similar are the results to
their answers after completing the activities?
What would your students suggest be done about educating
the public about aerosol products? Give them time to brain-
storm to see what they think would work best.
By analysis your students will be able to get some sense of any
change in their knowledge of and attitudes about aerosol
products.
Take time with your students to look back over the experience.
Did your students enjoy learning this way? What other topics
would they like to investigate in a collaborative fashion? What
other questions do they have about aerosol products that have
not yet been answered? How could they find out these
answers?
38 www.nocfcs.org
39. Student Materials Activity 4: The Big Survey
Activity 4:
The Big Survey
We live in a world that is changing fast. Because of rapid com-
Step 2
munications (Internet, cable television, cell phones, etc.), we
get to hear about important discoveries, issues and news in a Before you design your survey, you need to be sure that you
way which our grandparents could not have imagined when yourself understand the issues. To help you with this, please
they were young. But, because we get so much information, visit the CAPCO website www.nocfcs.org, which has back-
we tend to only remember those things that really concern us ground information on aerosol products and their relationship
at the time. We do not always “update” our knowledge, and with the environment.
this can mean that we continue to “believe” what we originally
learned, even though it may no longer be true. Read this over in your group and make notes of any important
points that you think people should understand about
You will be working with a group of your classmates to find out aerosols.
what people know and believe about aerosol products: how
they work and their relationship with the environment. You will It also will be helpful to refer to any resource materials in your
be conducting a survey to find out. classroom, or school library, on aerosol products and how they
work.
Step 1
Step 3
The first thing you will need to do is to choose your target
sample (the group, or groups, of people you are going to sur- With your group, discuss what you think are the five most
vey). Once you decide, each of you will be responsible for important things that the general public should understand
identifying five subjects (people) from that group to be sur- about aerosol products.
veyed.
You can share your list with another group to get some more
Sample Groups ideas.
Target sample groups might include:
•
•
other students
parents
Step 4
• people from your community
• a combination of these groups With your teacher’s help, hold a whole-class sharing session.
• other groups (e.g., people aged 20-40) One person should be nominated as “recorder.” His or her job
will be to make a list of the most important points about
aerosol products that you all agree would be helpful for the
public to understand.
Discuss these and come up with an agreed-upon list of no
more than 10 points. These points will become the basis of
your survey.
39 www.nocfcs.org