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7.1 Chemical Reactions and Matter: Bath Bombs

cover image with soap bubbles
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How can we make something new that was not there before?

UNIT OVERVIEW

This unit explores the fascinating world of chemical reactions starting with a simple bath bomb in water. Students create models to understand what happens to the dissolved matter and what causes gas bubbles to form. This sparks broader questions like: How can we create something entirely new?

At key points, students connect their learnings to other phenomena, like Elephant’s Toothpaste and the Taj Mahal’s marble surface crumbling.

Store-bought bath bomb in water. Courtesy OpenSciEd.

Key Learning Activities

Through these investigations, students will:

Plan and Conduct Investigations: Determine if the gas produced was originally part of the matter in the bath bomb and water.

Analyze Data: Use properties like density, melting/boiling point, solubility, and flammability to identify potential substances in the gas bubbles.

Develop and Use Models: Describe the atomic composition of molecules and extended structures to explain transformations.

Interpret Data on Matter Properties: Assess changes in water before and after adding energy to argue if a chemical reaction has occurred.

Construct Explanations for Mass Conservation: Explain why the total atom count, and therefore mass, is unchanged in a chemical reaction.

NGSS Standards

MS-PS1 Matter and Its Interactions

MS-LS1-8 From Molecules to Organisms: Structures and Processes

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