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JoVE Science Education General Chemistry
Common Lab Glassware and Uses
  • 00:00Vue d'ensemble
  • 00:52Principles of Glassware Composition
  • 02:03Qualitative Glassware
  • 03:47Quantitative Glassware
  • 05:31Procedural Glassware
  • 06:53Supporting Equipment
  • 08:07Applications
  • 09:27Summary

常见的实验室玻璃器皿和用途

English

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Vue d'ensemble

资料来源: 实验室的博士尼尔 · 艾布拉姆斯 — — 美国纽约州立大学环境科学与林业学院

玻璃器皿是精度的在化学专业实验室中,经常会出现,因为它有成本相对较低,极端的耐久性和特定级别。虽然一些实验室设备用塑料或甚至日常厨房材料作为补充,玻璃仍然是由哪些化验所做工作的标准材料。虽然有几条规则关于玻璃器皿,有奠定了良好的技术在实验室中使用的一些最佳做法。

玻璃是无处不在在化学实验室里,但并不是所有的玻璃是相同的。标准的消费者级玻璃被称为”碱石灰”或”浮”玻璃。真好,很多应用程序,但下快速加热和冷却应用扩张收缩裂纹。硼硅酸盐玻璃用来解决这一问题在实验室里。用少量的硼介绍,高硼硅玻璃具有非常低膨胀系数,这样可以防止内部应力。最常见的贸易名称为高硼硅玻璃是玻璃的耐热的相同类型用于一些厨房烤盘。

虽然高硼硅玻璃是热鲁棒,发现硼硅酸盐和标准玻璃中的杂质导致有限的温度范围和光学质量。熔融石英或石英,用于加热 450 ° C 以上或将要对 UV 光透明玻璃需要的地方的情况。石英是化学纯二氧化硅与无杂质和很高的熔点以上 1,600 ° c。在实验室中分辨高硼硅玻璃和石英的最简单方法是看不起一块玻璃器皿的长轴。绿色的颜色是指示性的高硼硅杂质而熔融石英是光学无色透明。

Principles

Procédure

1.定性用途玻璃器皿 烧杯 烧杯是最常见的玻璃器皿在实验室之一。它是一个简单的圆柱形容器,用于存放固体和液体与大小从非常小 (10 毫升) 到非常大的 (4000 毫升)。它有为便于浇筑和沉淀分离液体的嘴唇。毕业典礼是近似的但非常有用,当不需要确切的卷。 烧瓶 烧瓶设计这样的内容可以不漏打旋。他们也很容易装有塞子,经常有直接在瓶上写的…

Applications and Summary

While there are few rules to how glassware must be used, each piece of glassware was designed for a general set of procedures. Unique situations create some flexibility on the application, and nearly all glassware can be further adapted and customized with the assistance of a professional glassblower.

Transcription

Glassware has long been a core component of the chemistry laboratory.

Glass’s longstanding popularity has remained high because it is relatively inert, highly durable, easily customizable, and inexpensive.

Because of these desirable traits, glass has been used to create a wide assortment of apparatuses. Being unfamiliar with this equipment could lead to confusion, misuse and disaster. Therefore, a solid understanding of glassware is necessary to ensure safety and success in the lab.

This video will explore many of the common pieces of glassware found in the laboratory.

Laboratory glassware is manufactured with different compositions, each possessing unique properties that are useful in different experimental conditions.

Equipment made from consumer-grade, or “soda-lime”, glass is the least expensive, and is adequate for many applications. However, rapid temperature changes can cause this glass to crack.

Borosilicate glass, which exhibits little thermal expansion, is preferred in thermally stressful conditions. This glass is manufactured through the addition of small amounts of boron, and is often used in bakeware, such as Pyrex.

However, both borosilicate and standard glass contain impurities, resulting in reduced optical quality. Therefore, a glass composed of purely silicon and oxygen is utilized in situations that require the glass to be transparent to UV light. This is known as fused silica or fused quartz.

Now that you understand the different types of glass used in the laboratory, let’s look at common glassware, as well as related paraphernalia.

We will begin our survey with glassware used for qualitative analysis. Any measurements, or graduations, on this equipment are approximate, and they are best used for procedures that do not require high levels of accuracy. First, the beaker, one of the most common pieces of glassware, is available in a range of sizes. Beakers are often used to hold, mix, and heat reagents. Most have a small lip for pouring liquids.

Test tubes, which are relatively small cylindrical vessels, are also used to store, heat, and mix chemicals. Their design allows for multiple samples to be easily manipulated, stored, and observed at once.

Watch glasses are used when a large surface area is needed for a small volume of liquid. This is common for crystallizing and evaporating procedures. Watch glasses can also be used as covers for beakers.

The crystallization dish is similar to the watch glass, proving a large surface area for liquids. However, it is more commonly used as a container for bath processes. Lastly, the flask. Each type of flask is shaped for its purpose, but all are designed with wide bodies and narrow necks, allowing the contents to be mixed without spilling. They are also easily fitted with stoppers. The Erlenmeyer flask is the most common. The flat bottom allows it to be directly heated and used in simple boiling and condensation procedures.

Next, we will review glassware used for accurately measuring liquids. The graduated cylinder is used to measure semi-precise volumes, and deliver to another container. The surface of most liquids forms a concave meniscus in narrow glassware. Volume should be read at the bottom for accuracy. 

While the graduated cylinder is versatile, volumetric glassware is used when a higher level of accuracy is required. Volumetric glassware can be an order of magnitude more precise than a graduated cylinder. Each piece is marked with either “TD” or “TC”. If the equipment is calibrated to transport the measured volume, it is marked “TD” for “To deliver”. Conversely, other pieces of volumetric glassware are only calibrated to be accurate while holding the measured volume, and are marked “TC” for “To Contain”.

The volumetric flask is used to make and contain solutions of precise volumes. This is done by first dissolving the solute, and then adding solvent to the graduation to dilute to the intended volume.

Unlike the apparatuses that are accurate only to contain, the volumetric pipette is used to deliver a specific volume with a high degree of accuracy. A bulb is used to draw the liquid, never by mouth.

The burette is used to deliver variable, but precise, volumes of liquid, controlled with the stopcock. It’s often used in titration experiments.

Next, our survey will cover glassware that has more specific procedural uses.

First, the round-bottom, or boiling flask, is designed to allow for even heating and stirring, to drive chemical reactions. To prevent spills, it should never be filled to more than 50% of its total volume.

While traditional funnels have a familiar shape, there can be variations depending on their intended use. For example, funnels used for gravity filtration are fitted with folded filter paper. Powder funnels have wider stems designed for dispensing solids and viscous liquids.

The separatory funnel is used in liquid-liquid extractions to separate immiscible liquids of different densities. It has a specialized shape, with a wide top for mixing, and a narrow bottom leading to a stopcock for the separation. The Büchner flask and funnel are used for vacuum filtration. The funnel is typically ceramic, with pin-sized holes in its flat bottom. It is fitted into the flask with a rubber collar to provide an airtight seal. The flask resembles an Erlenmeyer in shape, but has a barbed side arm for the vacuum hose.

In some chemical processes, laboratory glassware may need to be sealed, connected, or supported. Sealing glassware is typically done with a stopper. Rubber and neoprene are used in pieces with standard necks. They can be manufactured with holes to allow for the insertion of tubes, thermometers, or stirrers, while still providing an airtight seal.

Glass stoppers are used to seal equipment with ground glass fittings. These provide a strong seal, but the possibility of glass to glass seizing necessitates the use of joint grease. Joint grease must also be used when connecting two pieces of glassware together. However, because these joints are not mechanically strong, plastic connector clips are used to prevent them from separating.

When additional structural support is needed, glassware is often clamped in place. Clamps provide this support by connecting to a piece’s neck on one end, and a retort stand on the other. While some glassware should always be secured, clamping can also be used to ensure that components stay upright during a procedure.

Now that we’ve surveyed many of the pieces of glassware found in professional laboratories, we’ll discuss some of their many uses.

Observation of naturally occurring, spontaneous reactions can be performed in the lab by replicating their original conditions. Glassware is vital to these investigations because of its inert and durable nature.

In the Miller-Urey experiment, the environment of early earth was simulated in a round-bottomed flask to investigate the abiotic synthesis of organic compounds. A large manifold of interlocking glassware helped to provide the necessary atmospheric gasses, which was then sparked, simulating lighting. The product was pipetted out of the flask to avoid contamination, and stored for further investigation.

When synthesizing organic molecules, it is often necessary to apply heat for long periods of time. In this example, a carbon-carbon cross-coupling reaction was performed using an apparatus made from three pieces of glassware. The apparatus – made from a round-bottomed flask, a reflux condenser, and an oil bubbler – allows for the solution to be boiled indefinitely, without losing volume or changing pressure.

You’ve just watched JoVE’s introduction to Common Glass Laboratory Equipment and Their Uses. You should now be familiar with the glassware used for qualitative, measuring, and procedural applications.

Thanks for watching!

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JoVE Science Education Database. JoVE Science Education. Common Lab Glassware and Uses. JoVE, Cambridge, MA, (2023).