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Unit 2.

Particles and Atomic Structure


Syllabus Ref. 10.1

Modelling alloys with plasticine

Class practical
This experiment enables students to experience how alloying can be used to change the properties of a metal. Plasticine (or
Play-Doh) is mixed with varying amounts of sand and its *ductility * is measured in a simple test. The plasticine (or Play-Doh) is
used to represent the main metal in the sample eg iron, and the sand an added substance eg carbon in steel.
The practical is suitable for students of all abilities and can remain at the level of observation for less able students, or act as a
springboard to explain the properties of alloys to more able students.

Lesson organisation
The model alloy is a mixture of plasticine (or Play-Doh) and varying quantities of sand. These can either be made by students or
made up in advance. The plasticine (or Play-Doh) can be used and re-used many times, so once the mixtures are made-up for
the first time which can take a while the actual practical work is very straightforward.

Apparatus

Chemicals

To make one set of models:


None
Different coloured lumps of plasticine or Play-Doh, 35
g, 4 (Note 1)
Sand (12 g) (Note 2)
Rough paper
Access to a balance
Per pair or group:
Magnifying glass
Health & Safety and Technical notes
Read our standard health & safety guidance
1 The samples can be prepared by a technician, or by the students. The samples can be used several times, so it is worth
ensuring that they are colour coded so that they are easy to identify such as all 2 g samples in blue. For the experiment to give
good results, it is very important that the sand is mixed thoroughly and evenly with the plasticine or Play-Doh. If the samples are
to be stored, it is worth wrapping them in clingfilm or placing them in plastic bags, to prevent the plasticine or Play-Doh from
drying out.
2 Sand from a builders merchants is the best, as the particle sizes tend to be fairly even. Sand from a fire bucket usually has a
wide range of particle sizes and is also often dirty, so is not recommended.

Procedure
Making the model mixture
a Weigh out 2 g of sand onto a piece of rough paper.
b Take one of the plasticine (or Play-Doh) lumps and mould it until it is warm and malleable. Work it into a flat shape about 0.5
cm thick.

c Sprinkle the sand onto the plasticine (or Play-Doh) and roll it up. Working over the rough paper, mould and work the solid,
adding back in any sand that falls out, until the sand is evenly distributed.
d Repeat with 4 g and 6 g of sand in the plasticine (or Play-Doh).
Using the mixture
a Mould each of the solid samples for about a minute until they are at hand temperature.
b Shape each of the samples into cylinders of about the same size and shape 6 cm long and 1.5 cm in diameter.
c Hold the ends of the cylinder firmly and pull the ends of the piece of plasticine (or Play-Doh) apart, slowly and steadily. If your
hands fly apart it is a failed test and you need to re-mould the cylinder and try again.
d Repeat for each specimen in turn, pulling with about the same force each time.
e Examine the fracture surface of the solid surface with a magnifying glass.

Teaching notes
If the same plasticine (or Play-Doh) samples are used repeatedly they always snap in the same place. To solve this simply
remould the solid samples for a couple of minutes until all the sand is evenly distributed again and the sample is warm.
The plasticine (or Play-Doh) and sand can be investigated further, and other factors such as temperature can be tested to see
the effect they have on the samples properties.
Another idea is to remove the 6 g sample from students at the start of the experiment. Students do the test on the 0 g, 2 g and
4g samples, and then have to predict what they expect for the 6 g sample. Alternatively, give them a mystery sample with an
unknown amount of sand in it (either 3 g or 5 g.) They have to determine the quantity of sand present by performing the same
test and comparing the results to the other tests they have done.
Students often get the terms brittle, malleable or ductile, and strong muddled up. It is worth ensuring at some stage during the
lesson that they are happy with the use of these. A material that can be stretched or drawn into wires is ductile (malleable means
that it can be moulded into shape when cold). If it does not stretch but snaps instead then it is brittle. A material can be strong
but brittle and indeed many are. The opposite of ductile is brittle not weak.
It is worth asking students to describe the results in detail, and to focus particularly on: the size of the fracture surface; what
happens to the plasticine (or Play-Doh) before it breaks; comparing the fracture surface with a piece of solid sample which has
just been snapped.
Students should be able to notice that:

the size of the fracture surface increases as the amount of sand increases;

the plasticine (or Play-Doh) thins before it breaks;

the fracture surface has a larger amount of sand in it than a piece which has just been snapped.

When the sand is added to the solid, the properties of the solid, including its malleability and ductility, are altered. This models
the way that alloying a metal will alter its properties. When a metal is alloyed, the added material interferes with the neat packing
of the original, pure metal. This prevents the layers from sliding over each other and reduces the malleability and ductility.
Health & Safety checked, September 2014

Credits
This Practical Chemistry resource was developed by the Nuffield Foundation and the Royal Society of Chemistry.

Nuffield Foundation and the Royal Society of Chemistry

Page last updated October 2015

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