Conduction, convection and heat radiation.
You need a heat source, a condensing tube and flasks.
You don't usually apply heat to a graduated cylinder. You may apply heat to beakers, flasks, and test tubes.
Flat bottom flasks (Erlenmeyer and Florence flasks) are used for heating all the time.
A flask is essentially a bottle. * In a labs, glass flasks (Erlenmeyer, Florence) are used for mixing heating and storing solutions. Sometimes they are graduated to show the volume of material that they contain.* Vacuum flasks are more robist, ususally with a side arm to remove gases * Insulated flasks keep things cold like liquid nitrogen
the heat may not be distributed uniformly if solids are heated in beakers or flasks
Conduction, convection and heat radiation.
jff
You need a heat source, a condensing tube and flasks.
The motivation is to avoid heat transfer by thermal radiation.
You don't usually apply heat to a graduated cylinder. You may apply heat to beakers, flasks, and test tubes.
insulation blankets thermos flasks double glazing
by inhibiting heat conduction
Beaker
Flat bottom flasks (Erlenmeyer and Florence flasks) are used for heating all the time.
why are vacuum flasks called vacuum flask
Because it is easy to heat,measure,identify colour,identify mixtures etc...