Convection Currents Made Easy


When part of liquid or gas is heated it expands and becomes less dense. The warmer, less dense liquid rises upwards and cooler liquid falls to take its place. This cycle of a liquid or gas rising and falling is called a convection current.

We set up a very simple convection current demonstration using hot and cold water with food colouring to show the movement of warm water through cold water.

Convection Current Demonstration

You’ll need

Tall glass or vase

A smaller glass or cup

Hot water

Cold water

Food colouring

Warm coloured water in a small container in a larger jar of cold water to show warm water rises

Instructions

Fill the tall glass or jar with cold water.

Fill the smaller container with hot ( but not boiling water ) and add a few drops of food colouring.

Carefully place the small container into the container with the cold water.

Watch what happens to the warmer, coloured water.

A jar of cold water with a smaller jar or warm water inside for a convection current demonstration
Second in a series of convection current demonstrations showing warm red water rising up through cold water

The hot, coloured water rises upwards and collects at the top of the cold water. It then cools and sinks downwards. Eventually all the water will be the same temperature.

How does convection work?

Particles of warm water move more quickly and spread out. They rise upwards through denser cooler water which sinks to the bottom where it warms up. Eventually all the liquid is the same temperature.

The warm water rises as when liquids and gases are heated they expand. This means they take up more room but have the same mass so their density is less than when they are cool. Substances with lower densities float on substances with higher densities.

Diagram showing water heating in a pan and the direction of heating. Warmer water rises, cooler water falls to take its place. This cooler water is then heated and rises.
Convection current in heated water

Ask an adult to help with this activity

Extra Challenge

Repeat the activity with cold water instead of hot and watch what happens to the coloured water.

cold water in cold water for a science experiment about convection

How is heat transferred?

Heat can be transferred in three different ways. Conduction, convection and radiation.

Conduction

Conduction of heat occurs when vibrating particles pass any extra vibrational energy to nearby particles. The more energy the particles have, the hotter the object gets. An example of this type of heat transfer is when metal pans are heated on a hob. Heat travels through the pan. If the pan handle is also metal, it will get hot too. This is why metal pans often have plastic or wooden coverings on their handles. Plastic and metal are not good conductors of heat.

Convection

Convection of heat is when warmer molecules of a liquid or gas move from a warmer to a cooler area taking the heat with them.

Water being heated in a pan is an example of convection. This is the type of heat transfer we demonstrated above.

Radiation

Radiation of heat is when heat is radiated to the surrounding area by heat waves. Particles are not involved in this kind of heat transfer.

Heat from the sun travelling through space is an example of heat transfer by radiation. This type of heat is transferred by waves.

Diagram showing convection, conduction and radiation with the example of a camp fire
Diagram showing conduction, convection and conduction

In the campfire and pan example above all three kinds of heat transfer can be seen.

Heat travels by radiation from the camp fire to the metal pan. Heat travels through the metal of the pan by conduction to warm the lower layers of water. The water is then heated by convection as the less dense warmer water rises through the cooler water to create a convection current!

Remember – heat is only transferred is there is a temperature difference.

Science concepts

  • Density
  • Conduction
  • Convection
  • Radiation
  • Heat transfer

Last Updated on June 13, 2022 by Emma Vanstone

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