The Lava Lamp – Density and Buoyancy

 

Model Description

This is a demonstration of the relationship between density and buoyancy.  It reinforces the concept that fluids that are less dense have a higher buoyancy.  In the case of the lava lamp, this causes the “lava” to rise vertically as heating causes its density to change.    This demonstration should take 3-5 minutes.

Engineering Principle

Archimedes Principle states that the buoyant force acting upward on a body is equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the floating body.

F_B = \rho_{fluid}gV_{body}

In this demonstration, a lava lamp demonstrates the buoyant force acting on a mass of translucent wax.  The wax is initially on the bottom of the lamp where the light bulb at the bottom heats it.  As the mass of wax heats, its density decreases and its volume increases.  Archimedes principle states that as the volume of molten wax increases, the buoyant force acting upon it also increases.  At some critical temperature and volume, the density of the wax is less than the density of the surrounding fluid, and the mass of wax rises.  Once at the top of the glass, the wax cools slightly, and its volume decreases as its density increases.  The wax mass then descends to the bottom of the lamp where the cycle repeats.

What You Need

Item Quantity Description/Clarification
Lava lamp 1 Translucent wax is preferable

How It’s Done

Before Class: Plug in the lava lamp at least 45 minutes prior to class.

In Class: After a discussion of buoyancy and density, unveil the lava lamp.  Note that the density of masses of wax that are rising must be less than the surrounding fluid.  Similarly, masses that have cooled at the top of the glass are now denser than the surrounding fluid.

Observations:  Students should be able to see the effect of varying density and volume upon the buoyant force.

Additional Application: For a tangential discussion, note that lava lamp have been used to initialize to create random numbers due to the chaotic nature of convective heating.

Ask a student if the lava lamp behavior would change in a very hot or cold room.  If the room is too cold, the wax would never warm to the point where the wax masses rise.  Conversely, if the room is too warm, the wax would rise to the surface and never descend.

Did you try this? Comment below to let us know how it went.

Cite this work as:

Phil Root (2019), "The Lava Lamp - Density and Buoyancy," https://www.handsonmechanics.org/thermal/632.



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