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Experiments​

Food is Fuel

Experiment #01 from Food Chemistry Experiments

Education Level
High School
College
Subject
Chemistry

Introduction

We consume food to get the energy necessary to run our bodies. Different foods contain different amounts of energy. In the United States, the energy in food is measured in Calories (which are actually kilocalories, indicated by the capital “C”); in the rest of the world, people use kilojoules (kJ).

What is in food that provides the energy? How do you measure the amount of energy in food?

In this activity you will be using a process called calorimetry to determine the amount of energy in different foods. You will burn measured quantities of different foods. The energy released will be used to increase the temperature of a known mass of water.

Once you know the change in temperature for the amount of water you used, you can calculate the amount of heat energy that went into the water using a well known equation

q = mCpT

where Q is the heat energy, m is the mass of the water, ∆T is the change in temperature and Cp is the specific heat of water, 4.18 J/gºC. This means that 4.18 joules of energy is required to increase the temperature of each gram of water by 1 degree Celsius.

You will then use the amount of heat produced and the mass of the food burned to determine the energy content, in kilojoules per gram, and energy per serving for each food you test.

Objectives

  • Determine the energy released from various foods as they burn.
  • Look for patterns in the amounts of energy released during burning of different foods.

Sensors and Equipment

This experiment features the following sensors and equipment. Additional equipment may be required.

Correlations

Teaching to an educational standard? This experiment supports the standards below.

International Baccalaureate (IB) 2025/Chemistry
Reactivity 1.2.3—Standard enthalpy changes of combustion, ΔHc⦵, and formation, ΔHf⦵, data are used in thermodynamic calculations.

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This experiment is #01 of Food Chemistry Experiments. The experiment in the book includes student instructions as well as instructor information for set up, helpful hints, and sample graphs and data.

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