+ All Categories
Home > Documents > CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook.

CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook.

Date post: 23-Dec-2015
Category:
Upload: valerie-phillips
View: 219 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
14
CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook
Transcript
Page 1: CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook.

CHEMISTRY

Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the

Science Notebook

Page 2: CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook.

Marie Curie (1867-1934)(1)

• First famous woman scientist in the modern world

• Received Nobel Prizes in both Chemistry and Physics

• Coined the term radioactivity

• Her notebooks are still so radioactive that they cannot be handled without special PPE. (2)

Page 3: CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook.

Edwin Howard Armstrong (1890-1954) (3)

• American electrical engineer

• Invented many of the circuits used in radio, radar, and television

• Inventor of modern frequency modulation (FM) radio

(4)

Page 4: CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook.

Famous Scientists’ Notebooks Montage

montage

“…a composite picture made by combining several separate pictures.”

Merriam-Webster. (n.d.). Montage. Retrieved from http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/montage

Page 5: CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook.

TASK:

A montage of the notebooks of four famous scientists is displayed on the next slide.

What are types of information are recorded in these pages?

Record one idea per sticky note.

Page 6: CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook.
Page 7: CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook.

9

Page 8: CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook.

THE CHEMISTS OF THIS CLASSROOM

HAVE WORKED

_______

DAYS

WITHOUT A SAFETY INCIDENT

Page 9: CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook.

http://66.218.145.149/videos/v2.1/Work_Chemistry/

Work_Chemistry_256k.wmv

Page 10: CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook.

Safety Contract Task

1. Sign both copies of the contract.

2. Take one home for your parent to read, sign, and return.

3. Affix the second copy in your science notebook.

4. Be sure to include an entry in your Table of Contents.

Page 11: CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook.

MSDS Guiding Questions

1. What section of information is most important? Why?

2. What potential hazards does your substance pose?

3. What type(s) of personal protective equipment (PPE) is/are recommended when handling your substance?

4. What basic first aid do you need to be aware of before using your substance in the lab?

5. How should your substance be disposed?

6. Note any words or acronyms used in the MSDS with which you are not familiar.

Page 12: CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook.

RU

LE

OU

TC

OM

EF

EA

TU

RE

Page 13: CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook.

Bibliography

American Institute of Physics. (n.d.). Marie curie and the science of radioactivity. Retrieved from http://www.aip.org/history/curie/resbr2.htm

Cummings, C. (2012, March 30). Caltech releases complete Einstein archive online. Retrieved from http://techli.com/2012/03/caltech-einstein-papers-project/

Einstein archives online. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.alberteinstein.info/

Merriam-Webster. (n.d.). Montage. Retrieved from http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/montage

Page 14: CHEMISTRY Safety in the Chemistry Laboratory and Creating the Science Notebook.

Image Credits

(1) Unknown. (Photographer). Marie Curie. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.flickr.com/photos/smithsonian/3379024364/

(2) Lab Notebook, Pierre (left side) and Marie (right side). (n.d.). Pierre and Marie Curie: Lab notebook 1898. [Print Photo]. Retrieved from http://www.umass.edu/wsp/philology/calendar/curie.html

(3) (1954). Edwin H. Armstrong 1890-1954. (1954). [Print Photo]. Retrieved from http://www.photolib.noaa.gov/htmls/pers0077.htm

(4) Radio Broadcast vol. 1 no. 1. (Photographer). (1922). Feed-back circuit. [Print Photo]. Retrieved from http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Armstrong_circuit.png

(5) Da Vinci, L. (Artist). (c. 1488). Design for a flying maching. [Print Drawing]. Retrieved from http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Design_for_a_Flying_Machine.jpg

(6) Bell, A. (Photographer). (1876). Retrieved from http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:AGBell_Notebook.jpg

(7) Brew, J. (Photographer). (2006). Otto Hahn's notebook 1938. [Print Photo]. Retrieved from http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Otto_Hahn's_notebook_1938_-_Deutsches_Museum_-_Munich.jpg

(8) Cambridge Digital Library. (Photographer). (n.d.). Newton's observations of snowflakes. [Print Photo]. Retrieved from http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:MS_Add._3958_-_4.jpg

(9) ТимофейЛееСуда. (Photographer). (2013). Safety first sign. [Print Photo]. Retrieved from http://commons.wikimedia.org:


Recommended