You might want to explore fractions of the form
$\frac{3}{n}$, $\frac{4}{n}$, $\frac{5}{n}$...... and think
about how the Egyptians would have represented these, using
sums with the least number of unit fractions.
NOTES AND BACKGROUND
The ancient Egyptians lived thousands of years ago, how do we
know what they thought about numbers? A little research on
this topic will show that famous mathematicians have asked
and answered questions about the Egyptian fraction system for
hundreds of years. You can find references to results in this
field that were proved in the 1200s and in the 2000s, and you
can also find some open questions - things mathematicians
think are true, but have not been proved yet.
Throughout history, different civilisations have had
different ways of representing numbers. Some of these systems
seem strange or complicated from our perspective. The ancient
Egyptian ideas about fractions are quite surprising.
For example, they wrote $\frac{1}{5}$, $\frac{1}{16}$ and
$\frac{1}{429}$ as

(but using their numerals)
They didn't write fractions with a numerator greater than 1 -
they wouldn't, for example,write $\frac{2}{7}$, $
\frac{5}{9}$, $ \frac{123}{167}$.... although there is
evidence that the specific fraction $\frac{2}{3}$ was used by
the Egyptians, and $\frac{3}{4}$ sometimes as well. They had
special symbols for these two fractions.
The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus is an important historical
source for studying Egyptian fractions - it was probably a
reference sheet, or a lesson sheet and contains Egyptian
fraction sums for all the fractions $\frac{2}{3}$, $
\frac{2}{5}$, $ \frac{2}{7}... \frac{2}{101}$.
Why did they only include the odd ones?
$\frac{4}{n}$ and $\frac{3}{n}$
In the 1940s, the mathematicians Paul Erdos and Ernst G.
Straus conjectured that every fraction with numerator = 4 can
be written as an Egyptian fraction sum with three terms. If
you have found an example that appears to need more than
three, can you find an alternative sum? Can you find a reason
why it must work, or a counter-example - the conjecture isn't
yet proved. It is proved for $\frac{3}{n}$.