Friday, February 3, 2017

Atoms in Motion app is Excellent for Demonstrating Kinetic Theory of Gases on iPad

Modeling at the Atomic Level Helps Students Understand Chemistry Concepts

So often my chemistry students can successfully manipulate the algorithmic calculations of the gas laws.  I wonder though if they really understand what they are doing.  The other day I put a balloon into a bell jar and evacuated it.  As the balloon expanded I asked my students if the pressure inside the balloon was increasing, decreasing or remaining constant.  Their answers were all over the map!  And this is first semester college General Chemistry!  Several students said that as the balloon volume increases the pressure inside the balloon must also increase must cause this expansion.  Gases are counterintuitive.  This makes them so much fun to teach! But gases are difficult for students to truly understand.  Several students mistakenly thought that as the balloon expanded in a decreasing pressure environment outside the balloon that the pressure inside the balloon must be increasing.  This might come from their experiences of blowing up balloons.  But in my demonstration we were not adding moles of the gas to the balloon as is done when it is blown up for a party.  There are other ways to expand a balloon.  Nevertheless the students had persistent misconceptions about how gases work.  Just because students can successfully perform Boyle's Law calculations does not mean they understand the concept behind the law.

The iPad is a wonderful way to allow students to engage with concepts at the molecular level.  The Atoms in Motion app shows how five different types of  Noble gas atoms behave under different conditions. It demonstrates how all of the particles move in straight lines, at different speeds and how their speed or direction can change after a collision with other molecules or walls of the container.  Atoms in Motion also demonstrates how Xenon will move much more slowly than Neon and yet both particles can have the same kinetic energy.  The temperature can be increased by an up-swipe of the finger.  I find myself just playing with this app when I am at home just because I find the molecular level so interesting!

As we know real gases deviate from the behavior of ideal gases at low temperatures and high pressures.  This app allows me to demonstrate what happens to gas molecules at low temperatures.  They no longer travel in straight lines when they approach, but don't collide with, another molecule.  At  low temperatures the kinetic energy of the molecules is not enough to be unaffected by the attractive Van der Waals forces between the particles.  Thus the paths of the atoms are somewhat curved.  They have to travel further distances between collisions with the container and the pressure is therefore lower than predicted by the ideal gas law.  This is beautifully demonstrated in the Atoms in Motion app.

To work the app you can just tap the element symbol to increase the number of atoms of the elements shown.  As I said you can swipe up with your finger to increase the temperature.  You can also put your finger on one particle and speed it up or down.  The pressure is shown when the molecules collide with the container so the pressure is changing with each collision or lack of collisions.  

If I were a sage, and I am not, but I would predict that chemical education is going to continue to evolve.  What a wonderful history has chemical education!  I love old chemistry books.  It is fun to see how my favorite subject was taught in the early 1900's for example.  The approach was quite different.  I think we will soon see another change.  I think we will see a continuing evolution to conceptual chemistry.  Computers are now at a speed where we can render molecular motion.  This will allow us to teach chemistry and chemical reactions at the molecular level.  I think this will provide a deep understanding for our students.  Whether major change in chemical teaching happens or not the iPad is a good tool to significantly enhance our students' understanding by visualizing molecular motion.  The Atoms in Motion app is a step in that direction.  And it was very reasonably priced. There is a free version which only allows one to use one kind of Noble Gas, but this version does give a good understanding of the capability of the app.  I am glad I purchased the upgraded version.  So far I have only used it on my iPad from which I teach up front.  I did not put the app on my student iPads.  I thought that I could demonstrate the concept well enough up front.  At some point I may purchase a class set of the apps and put them on the student iPads.  

Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Apple TV and iPad Pro a Match Made for Chemistry Teaching!

Today was another milestone.  I gave my first lecture while moving around the classroom...and never stopped writing on the screen at the same time!

Up to this point I had to keep the iPad Pro tethered to the VGA cable so that the iPad would project. So although the iPad Pro makes my lectures much better as I can write on my lecture outline which is on  the iPad with the Apple Pencil I was still stuck in the front of the classroom.

Apple TV changes all of that.  I simply tethered the Apple TV to the VGA port with the HDMI to VGA adaptor.  In other words this connects the Apple TV to the projector.  Then with an up finger swipe on the iPad I got to the Apple AirPlay Screen.


You can then select which Apple TV device you want to use.  A four numeral code will come up that you input the first time and then your iPad is "mirrored" onto the screen just as if you were connected with a cable.  And the best part is you are now untethered.  This code makes it so that you cannot "hijack" an Apple TV device that is in another room, although I was only asked for the code the first time so maybe  I can take over my colleagues lecture tomorrow!!

We now have an Apple TV device in each of our rooms.  I was able to give the Apple TV a specific name with the room number followed by Chemistry.  We just store the device in a drawer and take it out and plug it in right before we use it.  This process takes just as long as tethering the iPad to the lightning to VGA cable I used before.  I can have it all hooked up before the projector is warmed up.

I could walk around the room as I wrote on the iPad and what I wrote was on the screen.  This allows me to walk around the room and interact with my students, assess their progress, and not lose the ability to write on my notes.  I did not have to walk all the way from the back corner of the room to the front to resume the problem I had started.  I could even lay the iPad in front of a student, hand them the Apple Pencil and ask them to finish a problem I had started.  I am going to have to find a new "rhythm" with this new freedom in the classroom.  The only other issue was that the projected image is smaller.  In other words for some reason the image projected does not take up the same amount of screen space as when I project while tethered.  We will have to figure out a way to fix that.

So far I have been able to train almost all of our Biology and Chemistry Faculty in using the iPad Pro in their lectures and labs.  This device gives professors a new freedom to not be stuck in front as the "sage on the stage".  We can now move about our students and interact with them and even hand them the device and let them teach once in a while.  I must say though that I work with the best group of talented, hard working, and inspiring colleagues.  They teach me so much, want to keep learning themselves, and we all work so well together.  My dean and her support staff have kept saying "YES!" to so much of what we have asked for.  As much as the technology is useful and helps us create at a higher level, I think that having is good group of like-minded people willing to take risks and try new things may be even more important.