Hot air expands demonstration Follow FizzicsEd 150 Science Experiments: Comments 0 You will need: Hot water from a kettle or thermos CAUTION: adults to use this only! A glass bottle A balloon A tall plastic container Written by Fizzics Education. Reviewed by Ben Newsome CF. Cite this experiment Copyright Notice Instruction 1 Attach your balloon onto your glass bottle. 2 Place your glass bottle into the large plastic cup. 3 Carefully pour the hot water over the neck of the glass bottle. You should start to see the balloon start to inflate. CAUTION: adults to use this only! 4 Keep going until the balloon is inflated as per the picture! Try placing the bottle into cold water… what happens to the inflated balloon now? 5 School science visits since 2004! – Curriculum-linked & award-winning incursions. – Over 40 primary & high school programs to choose from. – Designed by experienced educators. – Over 2 million students reached. – Face to face incursions & online programs available. – Early learning centre visits too! 6 Online courses for teachers & parents – Help students learn how science really works 7 Get the Unit of Work on Heat Energy here! What actually is heat? How does heat move through different materials? How does heat change the properties of materials and more! Includes cross-curricular teaching ideas, student quizzes, a sample marking rubric, scope & sequences & more What is going on? Why Heat Inflates Air The rule is simple: hot gases expand, and cold gases contract! All gases are made of freely moving molecules. When you add heat energy to a gas, those molecules move faster and collide more forcefully against the sides of the vessel holding them. The more frequently and powerfully these molecules strike the walls, the higher the internal air pressure becomes. By placing the glass bottle in hot water, heat energy moved into the trapped air. This increased the kinetic energy of the air molecules inside, raising the pressure. Because the balloon is flexible, this increased pressure pushed the rubber outwards, causing the balloon to inflate! Variable testing More about variable testing here. Balloon Volume Try different size balloons. Does a larger balloon require more heat to show a visible change in inflation? Temperature Range With an adult, try different water temperatures. Is there a “threshold” temperature where the balloon suddenly starts to stand up? Container Geometry Try different shaped bottles. Does the volume of air inside the bottle change how quickly the balloon reacts to the heat? Going further: Gay-Lussac’s Law What you have observed is a perfect example of how the pressure of a gas is directly proportional to its temperature. In simple terms: if you increase the temperature, you increase the pressure (as long as the volume stays the same). This is known as Gay-Lussac’s Law, which states: The pressure of a given mass of gas varies directly with the absolute temperature of the gas, when the volume is kept constant. P1 / T1 = P2 / T2 Whereby: P1 = Initial pressure T1 = Initial temperature P2 = Final pressure T2 = Final temperature Interactive Simulation Explore the effect of changing temperature, volume, and pressure in this interactive simulation by the University of Colorado Boulder PhET project. Click on “Ideal” to see how molecules react in a perfect environment! âś… Reviewed: April 5, 2026 APA 7 Citation: Fizzics Education. (2020). Hot air expands demonstration. https://www.fizzicseducation.com.au/150-science-experiments/heat-experiments/hot-air-expands-demonstration/ Copy APA Citation Reviewer This resource was last reviewed for scientific accuracy on April 5, 2026. Ben Newsome CF is the recipient of the 2023 UTS Chancellor’s Award for Excellence and a Churchill Fellow. He is a global leader in science communication and the founder of Fizzics Education. Learn more! Hot & Cold Workshop Years 1 to 6 Maximum 30 students School workshop (NSW & VIC) 60 or 90 minutes Online Class Available Read More Enquire Now Liquid Nitrogen Show Years K to 6 Maximum 60 students Science show 45 minutes Online Class Available Read More Enquire Now STEM Full Day Accelerator - Primary Designed from real classroom experiences, this modular day helps you create consistently effective science learning that directly address the new curriculum with easily accessible and cost-effective materials. Read More Enquire Now Liquifly water rocket $31.95 excl. GST View Details Add to Cart Trustpilot
Carefully pour the hot water over the neck of the glass bottle. You should start to see the balloon start to inflate. CAUTION: adults to use this only!
Keep going until the balloon is inflated as per the picture! Try placing the bottle into cold water… what happens to the inflated balloon now?
School science visits since 2004! – Curriculum-linked & award-winning incursions. – Over 40 primary & high school programs to choose from. – Designed by experienced educators. – Over 2 million students reached. – Face to face incursions & online programs available. – Early learning centre visits too!
Get the Unit of Work on Heat Energy here! What actually is heat? How does heat move through different materials? How does heat change the properties of materials and more! Includes cross-curricular teaching ideas, student quizzes, a sample marking rubric, scope & sequences & more
Hot & Cold Workshop Years 1 to 6 Maximum 30 students School workshop (NSW & VIC) 60 or 90 minutes Online Class Available Read More Enquire Now
Liquid Nitrogen Show Years K to 6 Maximum 60 students Science show 45 minutes Online Class Available Read More Enquire Now
STEM Full Day Accelerator - Primary Designed from real classroom experiences, this modular day helps you create consistently effective science learning that directly address the new curriculum with easily accessible and cost-effective materials. Read More Enquire Now
Designed from real classroom experiences, this modular day helps you create consistently effective science learning that directly address the new curriculum with easily accessible and cost-effective materials.
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