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Science AHSGE

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Systeme International (SI) or Metric ... Accuracy refers to the agreement between a measurement and the true or correct value. ... Read from bottom of meniscus ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Science AHSGE


1
Science AHSGE
  • Standard I-1, part 2- Appropriate Laboratory
    Materials

2
Measurement
  • Universal system of measurement
  • Systeme International (SI) or Metric System
  • Based on units of ten
  • King Hendry Died By Drinking Chocolate Milk
  • Kilo- 1000s (k)
  • Hecto- 100s (h)
  • Deka- 10s (Da, Dk)
  • Base
  • Deci- 10ths (d)
  • Centi- 100ths (c)
  • Milli- 1000ths (m)
  • Base units
  • Volume, space- liters,cm3
  • Mass/weight- Grams
  • Distance, height, width, length- Meters

3
Measurement
  • Accuracy refers to the agreement between a
    measurement and the true or correct value.
  • Precision refers to the repeatability of
    measurement.
  • Error refers to the disagreement between a
    measurement and the true or accepted value.

4
Glassware
  • Do not use glassware that is broken, chipped or
    cracked.
  • Always use tongs or a heat-resistant glove to
    heat glassware.
  • a. Point test tube away from yourself and
    others when heating.
  • b. Allow to cool before storing.
  • 3.    If a glassware breaks, do not touch with
    bare hands. Place in special broken glass
    container.

5
Glassware
  • Graduated cylinder-piece of laboratory glassware
    used to accurately measure out volumes of
    chemicals for use in reactions.
  • Generally more accurate and precise for this
    purpose than flasks.
  • Read from bottom of meniscus
  • Fluid displacement- Determine the volume of an
    irregular solid by placing in a graduated
    cylinder with a known amount of fluid and
    measuring the difference

6
Glassware
  • Beaker- Simple container for liquids, very
    commonly used in laboratories.
  • Generally cylindrical in shape, with a flat
    bottom
  • Do not use to measure volume of a liquid.
  • Use for holding and pouring liquids.

7
Glassware
  • Burette (also buret)- Vertical cylindrical piece
    of laboratory glassware with a volumetric
    graduation on its full length and a precision
    tap, or stopcock, on the bottom.
  • Used to dispense known amounts of a liquid
    reagent in experiments for which such precision
    is necessary, such as a titration of an acid
    experiment.
  • Burettes are extremely precise class A burettes
    are accurate to 0.05 mL.

8
Glassware
  • Flask- Wider vessel "body" and one (or sometimes
    more) narrower tubular sections at the top called
    necks which have an opening at the top.
  • Flasks can be used for making solutions or for
    holding, containing, collecting, or sometimes
    volumetrically measuring chemicals, samples,
    solutions, etc. for chemical reactions
  • Other processes such as mixing, heating, cooling,
    dissolving, precipitation, boiling (as in
    distillation), or analysis.

9
Glassware
  • Pipette (also called a pipet, pipettor or
    chemical dropper)- Instrument used to transport a
    measured volume of liquid.
  • Works by creating a vacuum above the
    liquid-holding chamber and selectively releasing
    this vacuum to draw up and dispense liquid.
  • May have a bulb for suction.

10
Glassware
  • Petri dish- Shallow glass or plastic cylindrical
    dish that biologists use to culture cells, which
    can be bacteria, animal, plant, or fungus
  • Agar is a gelatinous substance chiefly used as a
    culture medium for microbiological work

11
Glassware
  • Test tube (culture tube)- Piece of laboratory
    glassware composed of a finger-like length of
    glass tubing, open at the top, with a rounded
    U-shaped bottom.
  • Typically used by chemists to retain multiple
    discrete samples of materials, usually liquids,
    during chemical procedures and experiments
  • Designed to allow easy heating of these samples.

12
Glassware
  • Microscope slide- thin sheet of glass used to
    hold objects for examination under a microscope.
  • Wet mount- Object to be viewed is prepared, or
    mounted, in water underneath a cover slip

13
Mass Measurement
  • Balance (also balance scale, beam balance or
    laboratory balance) is used to measure the mass
    of an object.
  • Triple-beam balance Balance with a pan and
    three beams with sliding masses called riders
  • At one end is a pointer
  • Indicates whether the mass on the pan is equal to
    the mass on the beams

14
Mass Measurement
  • Spring scales typically measure force due to
    gravity, which can be measured in units of force
    such as newtons or pounds-force.

15
Mass Measurement
  • Analytical balance-instrument used to measure
    mass to a very high degree of precision. The
    weighing pan(s) of a high accuracy (0.1 mg or
    better)
  • Inside a see-through enclosure with doors so dust
    does not collect and so any air currents in the
    room do not affect the delicate balance.

16
Time Measurement
  • Stop Watch- does what its name implies
  • enables hand timing
  • has millisecond accuracy and no artificial limit
    on hours

17
Distance Measurement
  • Distance is the measurement from one point to
    another.
  • How far away something is
  • Can be length, width, height, depth, altitude,
    etc.
  • Sometimes need to measure before the volume of a
    regular solid can be determined
  • V L x W x H

18
Distance Measurement
  • Ruler- the instrument used to rule lines and the
    calibrated instrument used for determining
    measurement

19
Distance Measurement
  • A tape measure or measuring tape is a ribbon of
    cloth, plastic, or metal with linear-measure
    markings, often in both imperial and metric
    units.
  • A meter stick measures up to 40 inches (3.281
    feet)
  • A yard stick measures up to 36 inches (3 feet)

20
Optical Instruments
  • A microscope -instrument for viewing objects that
    are too small to be seen by the naked or unaided
    eye.
  • optical instrument containing one or more lenses
    that produce an enlarged image of an object
    placed in the focal plane of the lens(es).

21
Optical Instrument
  • Simple Microscope- Microscope with only one lens
  • Compound Light microscope- Microscope with more
    than one lens which uses light to transmit image
    to your eye

22
Optical Instrument
  • Electron microscope- uses electrons to illuminate
    and create an image of a specimen
  • Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) involves a
    high voltage electron beam emitted by a cathode,
    usually a tungsten filament, and focused by
    electrostatic and electromagnetic lenses
  • Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) produces
    images by detecting low energy secondary
    electrons which are emitted from the surface of
    the specimen due to excitation by the primary
    electron beam

23
Optical Instrument
  • Reflection Electron Microscope (REM) involves
    electron beams incident on a surface, but instead
    of using the transmission (TEM) or secondary
    electrons (SEM), the reflected beam is detected

24
Optical Instrument
  • Telescope- an instrument designed for the
    observation of remote objects and the collection
    of electromagnetic radiation

25
Optical Instrument
  • Magnifying glass- (Hand lens) a convex lens which
    is used to produce a magnified image of an object
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