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Lab Safety Review

This lab safety review highlights essential guidelines to follow before, during, and after conducting lab experiments. Learn about handling glassware, dealing with chemical spills, using fire extinguishers, and identifying safety symbols. Stay safe in the lab!

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Lab Safety Review

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  1. Lab Safety Review

  2. 1.Before starting any lab experiment, you must: • listen to the teachers instructions; read lab instructions • gather necessary materials • wait till you get the go ahead

  3. 2. After a lab you must: • clean & put away all lab equipment • Note: Use right sized brush for test tubes • Report broken, chipped or cracked equipment to the teacher • wash your hands • work on your lab report

  4. 3. When heating a test tube you must: • put your safety goggles on • tie back loose hair • ensure that you have no loose clothing • use tongs • use a test tube made of “pyrex” or “kimax” • point it away from others • heat in a circular motion using clamp to hold

  5. 4. If you drop and break glassware you must: • identify any chemicals present and notify the teacher • sweep up the glass and place it in the glass disposal container

  6. 5. If you spill a chemical, you must: • tell your teacher immediately • clean up as per teacher’s instructions – for acid use baking soda, for base use boric acid

  7. 6. If a chemical is splashed in your eye, you must: • Never rub eye; wash your eye in the eye wash station for 15 minutes or cold water (slows down the reaction) • Never put another chemical on it • notify the teacher

  8. 7. When smelling a chemical, you must: • hold flask away from your face • waft the fumes with your hand • There is no fooling around or food and drink allowed in the lab. • Lab safety song

  9. Fire Extinguisher • On wall at rear of room • How to use: • P – pull the pin • A – aim low • S - squeeze the trigger • S - sweep back and forth to cover all areas • Fire extinguishers come in different forms • Chemical (dry/power, wet) • Water • NEVER USE A FIRE EXTINUISHER ON A PERSON

  10. Student on fire • STOP, DROP and ROLL • If fire does not go out, use the fire blanket ( on top of self) • NEVER USE A FIRE EXTINGUISHER ON A PERSON

  11. Assignment • Safety in the Lab worksheets

  12. Safety Symbols: • Hazardous products are identified by safety symbols • Each symbol has a border and an illustration to describe the hazard • There are symbols for two systems: Household and Workplace

  13. Assignment • On the sheet provided identify which symbols are Household Hazardous Products (HHPS) and which symbols are Workplace Hazardous Materials Information System (WHIMS) • describe when each border (octagon, triangle, circle) is used • Refer to your textbook, p. 518

  14. WHMIS: Workplace Hazardous Material Information System • This system is universal Circle – Red – Dangerous • Octagon – Red – Extreme Danger • Yield/triangle – Yellow – Caution • Diamond – orange – extreme warning

  15. Common Lab Equipment • Fill out the worksheet

  16. Beaker & tongs • Used to store, mix • Made by Pyrex & Kimax

  17. Erlenmeyer Flask • Used to mix • Use rubber stopper for storage

  18. Florence Flask • Used for mixing, or storage • Can be used for heating

  19. Graduated Cylinder • Accurate liquid measuring • The smaller the cylinder the more accurate it is • Meniscus – read from the bottom of the meniscus curve

  20. Funnels • Used for pouring liquids • Can use paper filters – filtration

  21. Triple – Beam – Balance • Measures mass in grams

  22. Test tubes & clamp • Heating • Mixing • Must be held with a clamp

  23. Tongs • Holding the beaker • Hold small items to heat/burn

  24. Stir rod & Scoopula • Scooping and mixing materials • Used for powders

  25. Crucible heats to very, very hot

  26. Evaporating dish • Allows crystals to form through evaporation

  27. Mortar and Pestle • To grind dry chemicals

  28. Bunsen Burner • heating

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