Insulator Lab Report
Insulator Lab Report
Rahul Parikh
9) At 30 second intervals, check the temperature and record on your Microsoft Word data
report
10) After 600 seconds, take control water bottle, cut the hole in the lid, and pour hot water into
it.
11) Repeat last 3 steps, recording data into the Word document.
12) After the experiment is finished, create data any way you would like, and graph the data
with your Spreadsheet program.
13) Clean up, and draw conclusions about the experiment.
Rahul Parikh
Insulator Data
Control Data
Temperature
(Celsius) (Celsius)
Temperature
Time in
Seconds
0
80
30
80
60
80
90
80
150
180
210
240
270
300
330
360
390
420
450
480
510
540
570
600
Time in seconds
80
79
79
79
79
78
79
78
78
78
77
77
77
77
77
77
77
30
75
60
74
90
74
150
180
210
240
270
300
330
360
390
420
450
480
510
540
71
70
70
69
69
69
68
65
64
63
62
61
60
59
Rahul Parikh
570
600
59
58
Control Data
90
80
70
60
50
Temprature (Celsius) 40
30
20
10
0
Time (Seconds)
Rahul Parikh
Insulator Data
Temprature (Celsius)
80.5
80
79.5
79
78.5
78
77.5
77
76.5
76
75.5
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
Time (Seconds)
Conclusion: We tested which materials would work best to insulate a plastic water bottle. We
hypothesized that the more insulation, the better the water bottle would insulate. We tested
mainly with foam packing peanuts, bubble wrap, and plastic wrap, and dramatically wrapped all
Rahul Parikh
the materials around the bottle. Our data proved our hypothesis, as our water bottle worked way
better than the control water bottle, which was just a regular water bottle. Our independent
variable was the materials around water bottle, and the dependent variable was the change in
temperature of the water. Some of our constants was the temperature of the water, and where we
tested our experiment. Our control results varied dramatically to our insulated one, as it changed
29 degrees Celsius, versus the insulated one only changed four degrees.
I think that our materials played a big role in our results, with plastic being a poor
conductor along with Styrofoam packing peanuts, it really trapped the energy well. Our
experiment went well, with sources of error at a minimum. Our insulator worked to be one of the
best out of 6 experiments, all because of our materials.