Hardness is probably a concept you are well familiar with. You already know that certain materials are harder than others; in fact, you prove it everyday when you chew your food and your teeth don?t break (because your teeth are harder than the foods you chew). Hardness can be defined as a material's ability to resist a change in shape. Modern hardness testers take a well-defined shape and press it into a material with a certain force, observing the indent it leaves in the material when it is removed. In this lesson, you will be performing hardness testing on different bars of chocolate.
45-50 minutes
Lab - How Hard is your Chocolate? PDF Document
Teachers Guide PDF Document
1. Students should view video clip Bend, Twist and Break: Fracture Surfaces QuickTime Video (1 minute 43 seconds).
2. Teacher should lead a discussion on various mechanical experimental designs that would test different physical properties of the chocolate bars.
3. Students should create a hypothesis which ranks the various chocolate bars in order form hardest to softest.
4. Students should complete the laboratory activity.
5. Students should watch video clip Bend, Twist and Break: Beyond the Laboratory QuickTime Video (1 minute 41 seconds)
6. Teacher should lead a discussion around various objects and careers in which the experiment would be useful.
7. Using the Virtual Microscope (http://virtual.itg.uiuc.edu/), students can view the candy bar samples under an electron microscope.
8. Students can compare results and average the data.
9. Some of the candy bars can be frozen and the same experiment conducted. One major source of error here would be heating of the bar while the experiment in being conducted.