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1.3: Obtaining Chemicals

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    534519
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    Laboratory chemicals are typically stored, and dispensed, in a variety of containers and locations. Therefore, early hurdles in every experiment are 1) figuring out how to obtain the desired amount of the chemical and 2) figuring out how to transfer this material safely from the location where it is obtained to the location where it will be used.

    Solids: Solids are usually stored in wide-mouthed bottles and weighed before use. The solid is weighed using a piece of weighing paper, and it is usually possible to transfer the solid from the bottle to the paper using a clean spatula or lab scoop. It is helpful to crease the weighing paper before weighing your solid to make transferring from the paper to your flask easier.

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    Liquids: Liquids are typically more difficult to handle, and the appropriate method will depend on how much liquid is needed and the specific properties of that compound. In most cases, it will be safer and more convenient to obtain a specific volume instead of weighing the liquid. For reagent quantities, a syringe, volumetric pipette, or a graduated cylinder can be used. Solvents tend to be used in larger quantities and a graduated cylinder will be used.

    Adapted from Getting chemicals to your reaction flask by Alexander Sandtorv.


    1.3: Obtaining Chemicals is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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