Lab Safety &Using the Microscope
Biology
Safety in the Lab
Answer pre-lab questions. Think, pair, share
Location of Safety Equipment including Emergency Exits
Safety Questions Location of Lab Equipment Identification of Lab Equipment Analysis and Critical Thinking - HW
Top 10 Safety Rules to Follow in the Biology Lab
1. Always follow the teacher’s directions. Never perform activities that are not authorized by your teacher.
2. Read ALL directions for an investigation several times. Follow the directions exactly as they are written. If you are in doubt about any part of the investigation, ask your teacher for assistance.
3. Keep your laboratory area clean and free of unnecessary books, papers, and equipment.
4. Be serious and alert when working in the laboratory. Never “horse around” in the laboratory.
5. Never eat or taste anything in the laboratory unless directed to do so. This includes food, drinks, and gum, as well as chemicals. Wash your hands before and after every investigation.
Top 10 Safety Rules to Follow in the Biology Lab
6. Report all accidents, no matter how minor, to your teacher immediately.
7. Point a test tube or bottle that is being heated away from you and others. Chemicals can splash or boil out of a heated test tube.
8. Never heat a liquid in a closed container. The expanding gases produced may blow the container apart, injuring you or others.
9. Never use broken or chipped glassware. If glassware breaks, notify your teacher and dispose of the glassware in the proper trash container.
10. When an investigation is completed, clean up your work area and return all equipment to its proper place.
Identify the following Lab Equipment:
Petri Dishes
Forceps
Graduated Cylinder
Slides
Test Tube
Erlenmeyer Flask
Slide Covers
Dropper
Thermometer FunnelBeakers
1 2 3 45
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7
8
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Science Safety Rules Review
List two of the top ten Science Safety Rules that students should follow in the science laboratory.
Parts of a Microscope
Parts & FunctionA. Eyepiece or Ocular Lens –
contains a magnifying lens usually 10x magnification
B. Arm – connects to base and supports the body tube; when carrying microscope one hand must hold the arm
C. Coarse focus – raises and lowers the stage or body tube for focusing image; use on LOW power objective only
D. Fine focus – slightly moves the stage or body tube to sharpen (adjust) the image; use on Medium or High power objective
Parts & FunctionE. Base – supports the microscopeF. Light
source/Illuminator/Projection Lens – produces light or reflects light up toward the eyepiece (may be a mirror)
G. Diaphragm – regulates the amount of light passing up toward the eyepiece.
H. Stage – supports the slide being observed
I. Stage Clips – holds slide firmly in place
Parts & FunctionJ. High Power Objective Lens –
focuses minute details on slide; provides a magnification of 40x
K. Medium Power Objective Lens – after finding image on low power, use to sharpen image; provides a magnification of 10x
L. Revolving Nosepiece – holds the objectives and can be rotated to change magnification
M. Body Tube – maintains the proper distance between the eyepiece and the objectives
N. Low Power Objective Lens – 1st objective used for focusing; provides a magnification of 4x (10x if no Medium power obj lens)
Care & Handling Microscopes
1. Always carry the microscope in an upright position with two hands. One hand should support the base and the other should be on the on the arm. Do NOT swing the microscopeCORRECT!!
! INCORRECT!!!
Care & Handling Microscopes
2. Never touch lens with your fingers! Oil produced from your body smudges the glass.
3. Use lens paper and lens cleaning solution to clean the lenses on the microscope.
Paper towel will scratch the lenses. Use a soft cloth to clean other parts of the
microscope.
Care & Handling Microscopes
3. Always set your microscope on a clean, flat surface.
4. When finished with the microscope, always remove slides from the stage.
Rotate the nosepiece to the lowest power. Clean stage with lens paper.
Use of the Microscope Carry microscope with one hand under base and
grasp arm with other hand Gently place the microscope on the table with arm
facing you. Raise body tube by turning the course adjustment
knob until the objective lens is about 2 cm above the opening of the stage.
Rotate the nosepiece so that the low power objective is directly in line with the body tube.
Use of the Microscope Look through the eyepiece and switch on the
lamp or adjust mirror to that a circle of light can be seen. Moving the diaphragm lever permits a greater or
smaller amount of light to come through the opening of the stage.
Place prepared slide on the stage so that the specimen is over the center of the opening. Use stage clips to hold slide in place.
Use of the Microscope Look at the microscope from the side. Carefully turn
the coarse adjustment knob to raise the stage until the low power objective almost touches the slide or until the body tube can no longer be moved. Do NOT allow the objective to touch the slide
Look through the eyepiece and observe the specimen. If the field of view is out of focus, use the course adjustment knob to LOWER the stage while looking through the eyepiece until the object comes into focus. You are moving the slide AWAY from the objective lens
Use of the Microscope Focus the image as best you can with coarse
adjustment knob. Then use fine adjustment knob to focus the image more sharply.
Adjust diaphragm lever to allow the right amount of light to enter.
To change the magnification, rotate the nosepiece until the desired objective is in line with the body tube. ONLY use FINE adjustment knob with medium and high power lens FIRST use medium power lens to sharpen image. SECOND use high power lens to focus minute details.
MicroscopesThree types of microscopes
Compound Light MicroscopeTransmission Electron Microscope (TEM)
Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM)
Overview of Microscopes
• Magnification – increase of an object’s apparent size• Total magnification: mag. of eyepiece
x mag. of objective lens Ex: (10X) x (4X) = 40X
• Resolution (resolving power) – the distance needed to distinguish 2 points as separate
Resolving PowerThe human eye is capable of distinguishing objects
down to a fraction of a mm. With the use of light and electron microscopes it is possible to see down to an
angstrom and study everything from different cells and bacteria to single molecules or even atoms.
Compound Light Microscope
• Specimen is enlarged as light passes through set of glass lenses
Can be used to view living specimens Resolving power is limited to the
physical character of light – up to 200 nm
Magnification up to 2000x beyond ~2000x the image becomes blurry
Transmission Electron Microscope
Cannot be used to view living specimens
Transmits a beam of electrons focused by a set of magnetic lenses through a specimen
Creates a flat image• Magnification – up to 5,000,000x• Resolution – up to 0.2nm
Scanning Electron Microscope:
Cannot be used to view living specimens
A narrow beam of electrons is pass over the surface of the specimen, which is coated with a thin layer of metal, producing a 3D image
• Magnification up to 500,000X• Resolution – up to 10 nm
Microscope ComparisonMicroscope Function
Max Magnification Best for Disadvantages
Compound Light
Uses visible light to illuminate a thin section of sample
Approx. 2000x School light
microscopes 40-400x
Looking at some living things (ex – a single cell layer
Looking at cells and tissues (preparation steps are less critical than for electron microscopy)
Getting an overvies of a sample
Low resolution compared to the electron microscope
Scanning Electron
(SEM)
Lets you look at the surfaces of objects at high resolution
Approx 500,000x
Looking at the surfaces of objects
Looking at objects in 3D
Resolution often not as high as the transmission electron microscope
Can’t be used to look at living things (samples need to be dried and coated in metal before visualizing)
Costly to run
Transmission Electron
(TEM)
Lets you look at a very thin cross-section of an object (such as a cell)
Approx. 5,000,000x
Looking at internal structure of objects
Looking at objects at very high resolution
Looking at relationships between stuctures at high resolution
Can’t be used to look at living things (samples need to be prepared extensively before visualizing
Costly to run
http://www.sciencelearn.org.nz/Contexts/Exploring-with-Microscopes/Sci-Media/Interactives/Which-microscope
TEM image
Transmission electron microscope image of a human leukocyte (also known as a white blood cell), showing the Golgi apparatus, which is a structure involved in
protein transport in the cytoplasm of the cell.http://
www.sciencelearn.org.nz/Contexts/Exploring-with-Microscopes
SEM image
A head louse clasping a human hair. The image was taken using an SEM at 110x magnification. At low magnifications like this, SEM
generates three-dimensional images that are in focus throughout the depth of the sample. http://
www.sciencelearn.org.nz/Contexts/Exploring-with-Microscopes
Microscope Images
http://remf.dartmouth.edu/imagesindex.html
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