I have been working on an experiment to investigate the ideal gas law using popcorn kernels.
Basically the experiment goes:
Weigh popcorn kernels, determine their volume, heat them until they pop, weigh them again.
Use PV=nRT to approximate the internal pressure of the kernel as it pops (knowing V, R, T, and n(from mass difference)). Unfortunately this approximates a pressure of about 200-300 atm which is too high.
The"literature" states that popcorn should pop at 175C and 9atm. I would realy like to know how they determine this (to me it looks like they have just taken the boiling point of water at 9atm, ie 175C).
I am aware that water is not an ideal gas and that there are assumptions being made regarding the volume and mass etc. Using van der Waals equation of state still only gets me to 40-90 atm.
Any ideas? I have access to some equipment if people can think of another way to test this (or a more interesting way to show ideal gas law in the vain of consumer chemistry).
Cheers,
Mike