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Brennstoffzelle
In 10 interaktiven Aufgaben und interaktiven Videos wird Wissen zu Brennstoffzellen vermittelt und anschließend abgefragt.
Das Medium bietet H5P-Aufgaben an, die ohne zusätzliche Software verwendbar sind.
Durch interaktive Aufgabentypen wird das audiovisuelle und interaktive Lernen einfach.
Lernen macht jetzt Spaß!
Included Tasks
- I Energiequellen - Video mit interaktiven Aufgaben
- II Was ist eine Brennstoffzelle? - Lückentext
- III Wirkprinzip: kalte Verbrennung - interaktives Video
- IV Vorteile der Brennstoffzelle - interaktive Aufgabe
- V Elektrolyse und Wasserstoffbrennzelle - interaktive Aufgaben
- VI Kraft-Wärme-Kopplung und Brennstoffzelle - interaktiver Vergleich
- VII Geschichte der Brennstoffzelle - interaktive Zeitleiste
- VIII Brennstoffzellen im Alltag - interaktive Aufgabe
- IX Wissenskarten - interaktive Flashcards
- X Brennstoffzellenquiz - interaktive Aufgabe
Curriculum-centred and oriented towards educational standards
Matching
Acids and Bases
We can find acids and bases in every supermarket, some of them in our food, others in cleaning agents. In everyday products, acids and bases as well as acidic and alkaline reacting salts have extremely different functions. In food, acids are either present or added as flavouring agents such as citric acid, tartaric acid and acetic acid, as antioxidants such as ascorbic acid or generally as acidifiers, sequestrants (citric acid and tartaric acid) and preservatives (acetic acid).
Periodic Table
With the help of the periodic system chemists can predict properties of chemical elements and derive chemical reactions. But you need not be a chemist to understand the periodic system.
C, CO2 and Associates in Everyday Life
All organic matter contains carbon. Coal is deposited in the Earth's interior. It developed about 300 million years ago from plants in a geological period which is also called Carboniferous. During the combustion of organic matter, carbon turns into the gas carbon dioxide. Dissolved in water, it becomes the so-called carbonic acid. Carbon dioxide is an incombustible, colourless and odourless gas that is easily dissolved in water. With various metal oxides or hydroxides it forms two types of salts: the carbonates and the hydrogen carbonates. As calcium carbonate it is contained in natural products such as chalk and egg shells. Specific forms of carbon, called modifications, are graphite and also the particularly valuable diamond.
