How To Do A Science Fair Project On Paper Towels
Science fair projects require a hypothesis, some amount of experimentation, and a final report and presentation that explain your findings. It is important to start planning your project early, as you will need time to complete each step of the project, and you cannot usually do this the night before the due date. If you want to do a science fair project about paper towels, one that centers on testing their strength when wet is a relatively easy way to go.
Create a chart for measuring the results of your experiment. This chart should have a row for each paper towel brand, with a column for brand name, number of coins, and rank.
Pull a sheet off each paper towel roll. Cut all of the sheets down to the same size.
Hold the first paper towel over the bowl of water. Have a couple of friends or family members hold each corner of the paper towel. The bowl catches any excess water and prevents a mess.
Add five teaspoons of water to the paper towel, and then start placing coins on top of it, one at a time. Place all of the water in the center of the towel.
Add quarters to the paper towel until it breaks. Record the number of coins on your data sheet. Once you have done this with all of the paper towels, you can rank them from strongest to weakest. Add quarters one at a time.
Write a report that uses the question, "Which brand of paper towels is the strongest when wet?" Describe the goals of your project, what occurred during your experiment, and the conclusions you drew. Your hypothesis can be an educated guess based on personal experience or advertising. For instance, if one brand of paper towel advertises itself as the strongest, your hypothesis could read, "Brand X is the strongest wet paper towel."
Create a backboard that has some examples of the paper towels, pictures from the experiment, and the most important parts of the report, like hypothesis, conclusion, and important data, such as the number of quarters each brand handled. (Your chart will work well here.) Use this backboard as a visual aid when describing your project.
Things Needed
- 3-5 paper towel brands
- Jar of quarters or pennies
- Eye dropper
- 2 friends, classmates or family members
- Science Buddies: Science Fair Project Question
Cite This Article
Bowerman, Todd. "How To Do A Science Fair Project On Paper Towels" sciencing.com , https://www.sciencing.com/do-fair-project-paper-towels-7957199/. 19 February 2011.
Bowerman, Todd. (2011, February 19). How To Do A Science Fair Project On Paper Towels. sciencing.com . Retrieved from https://www.sciencing.com/do-fair-project-paper-towels-7957199/
Bowerman, Todd. How To Do A Science Fair Project On Paper Towels last modified August 30, 2022. https://www.sciencing.com/do-fair-project-paper-towels-7957199/
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Your Guide to Science Projects, Fun Experiments, and Science Research
Science Project: Paper Towel Water Absorbency Rate
By Janice VanCleave
Comparing the Water Absorbency Rate of Different Paper Towel Brands
A TV advertisement claims that Brand X paper towels are the best. You could compare the water absorbency rate of Brand X with other paper towel brands. Water absorbency rate is the amount of water absorbed in a certain amount of time.
Science projects need a question, hypothesis, experiment procedure, data, data analysis, conclusion, and display. Since there are so many parts the best way to stay organized is to keep all your notes in a science note book. This could be called a Science Log or a Science Journal. If your teacher doesn’t give specific instructions for this note book, you may organize it any way you wish. But, since it is a good idea to show this notebook with the display of your project, I suggest that you read some of the ideas on this Science Fair Project: Log Book Link.
Following are ideas for a paper towel water absorbency rate project.
Science Project Question:
Science Projects need a question. For this project the question could be: 1. How does the water absorbency rate of Brand X compare to other paper towel brands? 2. How does the water absorbency rate due to Brand X’s quilted design compare to other paper towel brands? 3. What effect does price have on the absorbency rate of paper towels?
Hypothesis:
A hypothesis is your prediction about the results of the investigation. In other words, what do you think? Will Brand X be more absorbing or not? What do you base your prediction on? Study the physical characteristics of Brand X. Does it have something special that might make it more absorbing? If Brand X is expensive, some think the higher priced items are better. Maybe Brand X is advertised as having some special design. You have to have a reason for your hypothesis. Following are example hypotheses.
1. If Brand X’s quilted design increases water absorbency, then Brand X will absorb more water than other paper towels. 2. Brand X will absorb more water because of its quilted design. 3. Brand X is the most expensive, thus it will be the best water absorbing paper towel. 4. If expensive brands are best, then Brand X will be the best water absorber.
You need to design an experiment that allows you to measure the amount of water that each paper towel absorbs in a certain amount of time. To do this you need a container that has measurements. The diagram shows a piece of tape with equal spaced marks starting with 0 at the top.
I chose to color the water with red food coloring so that the water level would be easier to read. The paper towel is folded and stood in the colored water. As soon as the paper touches the water a stop watch needs to be started. After exactly 20 seconds (a time I randomly chose) the paper is to be lifted out of the water and discarded. You could have a discard container available for the wet paper towels.
After lifting the paper out of the red water read and record the level of red water on the tape scale. Note that the tape scale doesn’t have any units. In other words, it is a number scale without units, such as inches or milliliters. This type of scale can be used when comparing things. For example, if Brand X absorbs water so that the red water drops down to the 6th mark and another paper towel only absorbs water dropping the water surface down to the 3rd mark, it shows that Brand X absorbs more water than the paper towel it is being compared to.
Enrichment: You could show the math ratio between Brand X and each paper towel it is being compared to. In the previous example, the the ratio would be 6 to 3 or 3 to 1. This would mean that Brand X absorbs 3 times as much water as does the paper towel it is being compared to.
Research on this website information about data analysis, conclusion, and display.
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