by Emily SchulmanAbstract
Alexandria, Virginia
Introduction
For my fifth grade science fair project I found out
how well newspaper, bubble wrap, and cardboard insulated cups of ice.
Materials and Methods
I got twelve plastic cups and filled them each with
¼ cup of
water and then put them in the freezer overnight. The next day I took
them out of the freezer and I put nine of them in boxes (three in
cardboard-lined boxes, three in bubble wrap-lined boxes, and three in
newspaper-lined boxes). The other three were controls. That means they
weren't in boxes.
I set a timer that would go off in two hours. After the timer went off,
I took the cups and poured out the water and then put the cups on the
scale and weighed them. Then I put the cups back in their
places for another hour and did the same thing that I did before. This
is what my experiment looked like:
Weird Things I Noticed
The cardboard 2 sample was just below the 40 gram
mark
after two hours and the other two samples were between 45 and 50 grams.
The bubble wrap sample 2 had a very sharp decline in
grams between two and three hours. Even the controls didn't have such a
sharp decline.
Control 2 barely melted between two
hours and three hours.
Why is it always sample 2 that's weird???
Conclusion
My question was which material insulates the best.
I found out that newspaper insulated the best. I also found out that
it's not a good idea to let
your Dad help too much with writing up your science fair project.
You can also read my Dad's version of this.