A new laboratory?
Building or refurbishing a new laboratory
If you are working in a brand new school or one which is being refurbished you may be involved with or consulted over the design and installation of a new chemistry laboratory. Different countries will have their own legal requirements and different schools will be working to different budgets. Among things to consider are:
- the maximum number of students to cater for
- the supply and positioning of services such as water, electricity and gas
- heights and sizes of workbenches
- adequate lighting
- fume cupboards and general ventilation
- storage of chemicals
- preparation areas
- office space for teaching staff and the technician(s)
You will need to search for suppliers in your own country. For example, in the U.K. two good companies that will design and supply to your specifications are Interfocus and Tecomak.
Equipping a new laboratory
As a teacher you may not have much involvement in the design and installation of a new laboratory but you should definitely insist that you are at least consulted as to what goes in it. Although there are the mandatory laboratory components there are no compulsory experiments that must be done for the IB either at SL or at HL. This means that different schools may have very different equipment. Nevertheless there is some basic equipment that all schools should have and also some essential chemicals. Below is a list that I have made for a typical IB school. As you will see this contains an introduction with further information (including using or adapting materials from supermarkets at no cost!) as well as apparatus and chemicals.
Suggested equipment for an IB HL Chemistry course
Introduction
The new Chemistry programme examined for the first time in May 2016 does not include any mandatory chemical techniques that must be covered practically except possibly titration which is listed under Topics 1 and 8 although even this could be covered using a simulation. However it does include some specific ICT techniques and all students must use a data logger at least once during the two year programme. Candidates should spend approximately 60 hours on laboratory work and this should form a broad and balanced programme but the actual choice of which specific experiments are included is left to the individual teacher. Because students will all carry out their own Individual Scientific Investigation for ten hours a variety of different equipment and chemicals is advisable although many students may opt to obtain their data from secondary sources for this. It is therefore impossible to devise a prescribed list of equipment and materials applicable to all schools as each school will have its own individual requirements. Furthermore the choice of options will considerably influence the final choice of experimental investigations. However from my experience of running workshops worldwide for IB chemistry teachers I find that I am often asked to provide such a list. The following is an attempt to satisfy this demand but it must be stressed that in no way is it mandatory and that for many schools financial restrictions and availability will inevitably play a large part in determining what equipment and materials can be obtained. Similarly different countries have different Health and Safety regulations and what may be legal in one country may be illegal in another.
For the purpose of the following list I have made several assumptions. I have assumed that for the most part students will be working in a purpose-built laboratory with sufficient space for them to work adequately in pairs with each pair having access to a sink with running cold water, a mains electricity supply and a supply of natural or bottled gas. I have assumed a class size of between 12 and 16 students and listed the equipment either as that to be shared by the whole class or the equipment necessary for each pair.
It should be stressed that the nature of practical work in Chemistry has changed radically in the past few years. There is now a strong emphasis both on risk assessment for safety and concern for minimising any harm to the environment. For both of these reasons microscale or small scale experiments are to be strongly encouraged. With the advent of electronic balances capable of weighing to ± 0.001 g this does not mean that accuracy has to be sacrificed. Indeed for many experiments gravimetric rather than volumetric analysis now gives more accurate results and uses considerably less chemicals and reduces the need for large quantities of distilled or de-ionized water. For this reason where volumetric analysis is used I have recommended 10 cm3 pipettes and 100 cm3 volumetric flasks in place of the more traditional 25 cm3 pipettes and 250 cm3 volumetric flasks. Many good experiments can now be performed using very cheap ‘supermarket’ materials and this has the added advantage that students are able to adapt the materials to design an investigation and overcome problems at virtually no cost. Examples include the use of polycarbonate cola bottles fitted with a car tyre valve for gas law experiments, polystyrene cups for use as calorimeters for determining enthalpy changes, beer bottle tops as a crucible for determining the formula of magnesium oxide and zipped bags as mini fume cupboards for toxic gas reactions. Dropping pipettes, very small test-tubes and well plates all play an important role in reducing the amount of chemicals used. From my own experience I have found that students are often more observant, not less observant, when they carry out reactions on a small scale. Finally students should be encouraged to widen their concept of what is meant by a ‘laboratory’ and engage in some practical investigations outside of the traditional school laboratory. Planned visits to university or industrial research laboratories, local chemical industries, local powers stations and waste water treatment plants and the use of spread sheets, data banks and search engines on the Internet can all form an important part of the practical programme.
1. Equipment for the whole class
1 x electronic top pan balance weighing to 0.001 g
1 x electronic top pan balance weighing to 0.01 g
1 x still for distilled water + containers for the distilled water
1 x oven
1 x microwave oven
1 x desicator
1 x food calorimeter
1 x gas syringe oven
1 x visible spectrometer or colorimeter
1 x Hoffman voltammeter
1 x melting point apparatus fitted with 0 – 360 oC thermometer
4 x data loggers
Assortment of data logging probes (e.g. temperature, pH, calorimeter, light)
Sufficient supply of small test-tubes, ignition tubes, boiling tubes and dropping pipettes
Sufficient supply of clamp stands, clamps and bosses
Substitute asbestos mats
Sufficient supply of rubber tubing, corks and rubber bungs
Sufficient supply of pH meters, laboratory power packs, crocodile clips and leads
Sufficient supply of digital multi-meters
Sufficient supply of salt bridges
Models of ionic crystals, graphite, diamond, buckminsterfullerene and ice
Access to fume cupboard fitted with safety screen
Set of cork borers
Glass tubing and capillary tubing
Glass cutters
Crucibles and lids
Polystyrene cups with lids
Deflagrating spoons
Electrolysis cells
First aid kit
Eye wash equipment
Access to a shower or fast running water
Sufficient fire extinguishers, sand buckets and fire blankets
Heating mantles
Indicator papers
Magnetic stirrers and followers (‘fleas’)
Pestles and mortars
Clay triangles
Refrigerator
Dishwasher for glassware
Drying rack
Silica plates for TLC
U.V. lamp
Spills/matches
Sufficient gas syringes
Paper towel dispenser
Technician’s tool kit (scissors, screwdriver, pliers, knives etc.)
Trolleys and trays
Set of HAZCARDS and relevant safety information
Access to word processing, spreadsheet, graphing and Internet facilities
2. Equipment for each pair of students
2 x safety goggles or face masks
2 x aprons or other protective clothing
1 set of ‘Quickfit’ apparatus comprising:
1 x 10 cm3 round bottom flask
1 x 50 cm3 round bottom flask
1 x 100 cm3 round bottom flask
1 x Liebig water condenser
1 x air condenser
1 x separating funnel
2 x stoppers
1 x thermometer holder
1 x reduction adaptor
1 x two-neck adaptor
1 x vented bed adaptor
1 x distillation head with thermometer socket
1 x cork ring
1 x -10 - +110 oC thermometer
1 x 10 cm3 pipette
1 x 50 cm3 burette
1 x pipette filler
1 x 100 cm3 volumetric flask
1 x weighing bottle
3 x 100 cm3 conical flasks
1 x 100 cm3 measuring cylinder
1 x 10 cm3 measuring cylinder
1 x set of beakers (400 cm3, 100 cm3 and 25 cm3)
1 x test-tube rack
1 x test-tube holder
1 x Bunsen burner, tripod and gauze
1 x water pump
1 x Buchner flask with glass sintered filter and rubber seal
1 x filter funnel with necessary filter papers
1 x spatula
1 x glass stirring rod
1 x white tile
1 x set of ‘Molymod’ student organic modelling set
1 x ‘Molymod’ student shapes of molecules modelling set
3. Chemicals
(i) Elements
Hydrogen (cylinder or prepared in situ)
Graphite rods
Oxygen
Sodium
Magnesium
Aluminium
Silicon
Red phosphorus
Sulfur
Chlorine (cylinder or prepared in situ from KMnO4 / conc. HCl)
Iron
Nickel
Copper
Zinc
Bromine
Tin
Lead
Iodine
(ii) Volumetric solutions (0.100 mol dm-3 unless stated otherwise)
Ammonia
Ethanoic acid
Hydrochloric acid
Potassium manganate(VII), KMnO4, (0.0200 mol dm-3)
Sodium hydroxide
Sodium thiosulfate
(iii) Aqueous reagents
Dilute ammonia
Dilute hydrochloric acid
Dilute sodium hydroxide
Dilute nitric acid
Silver nitrate
Potassium chromate(VI)
Potassium dichromate(VI)
Potassium manganate(VII)
Copper(II) sulfate
Barium chloride
Starch
Saturated calcium hydroxide (lime water) solution
Bromine water
Saturated sodium carbonate solution
Various acid/base indicators including: universal, phenolphthalein and methyl orange
(iv) Inorganic compounds
Aluminium chloride
Aluminium oxide
Aluminium sulfate
Ammonia (concentrated)
Ammonium iron(II) sulfate
Barium chloride
Brass foil
Calcium chloride (anhydrous)
Calcium hydroxide
Copper(II) carbonate
Copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate
Copper(II) sulfate (anhydrous)
Hydrochloric acid (concentrated)
Iron(III) chloride
Iron(III) nitrate
Iron(III) sulfate
Lead bromide
Lithium chloride
Magnesium chloride
Magnesium oxide
Manganese(II) sulfate
Nichrome wire
Nitric acid (concentrated)
Phosphoric acid
Phosphorus(V) chloride
Phosphorus(V) oxide
Potassium bromide
Potassium chloride
Potassium chromate
Potassium dichromate
Potassium hydroxide
Potassium iodide
Potassium managanate(VII)
Potassium sodium tartrate
Potassium thiocyanate
Silicon dioxide
Silver nitrate
Sodium carbonate
Sodium chloride
Sodium hydrogen carbonate
di-sodium hydrogen phosphate
Sodium hydrogensulfite
Sodium hydroxide (pellets)
Sodium nitrite
Sodium peroxide
Sodium sulfate
Sodium sulfite
Sulfur dioxide
Sulfuric acid (concentrated)
Zinc sulfate
(v) Organic compounds
Benzoic acid
Benzylamine
Bromobenzene
1-bromobutane
2-bromobutane
2-bromo-2-methylbutane
Castor oil
Camphor
1-chlorobutane
Cyclohexane
Cyclohexene
Cyclohexanol
Ethanol
Ethanoic anhydride
Glucose
Heptane
Hexane
Hexan-1-ol
2-hydroxybenzoate
1-iodobutane
Methanol
Methylamine
Methylbenzene
Methylene blue
2-methylpropan-2-ol
Naphthalene-2-ol
Nitrobenzene
Pentan-2-one
Pentan-3-one
Propan-1-ol
Propan-2-ol
Propanone
Propanal
Phenol
Phenolphthalein
Phenylamine
Salicylic acid
Starch
Stearic acid