A gas syringe is basically a device that fills up with a gas that is produced and gives a volume for that gas. Gas from a reaction is forced into the syringe due to pressure and the syringe plunger is forced out (just like how you suck up a liquid with a normal syringe). It can be used to detect the volume of gas produced in a chemical reaction for instance.
See the Web Links to the left for more information.
The gas commonly used in gas sterilization is ethylene oxide (EtO).
yes he did
It is much easier to just use a insulin syringe and withdraw to .21/2 or .2 and 5 small lines
No. Poison gas was first used in World War 1.
Mustard gas is a deadly mix of chemicals that form a gas that goes into your lungs and literally burns you inside out. It was used in the trenches during ww1 but it was never used after that
A gas syringe A gas syringe
Syringe
A gas syringe is used to measure and dispense liquids or insert and withdraw a volume of gas. These syringes vary in sizes and can collect from 500 ml to 0.25 ml of gas.
Is it to push and pull the gas into the syringe or something else?
You cannot use a gas syringe for this experiment.
It is used to hold a gas syringe in place when carrying out an experiment. The gas syringe will fill up with gas and you can read the amount of gas within it using the measuring lines. Hope it helped. Ask for any other queries that need answering.
Is it to push and pull the gas into the syringe or something else?
Is it to push and pull the gas into the syringe or something else?
it is used to inject small quantity of sample in liquid and gas chromatography
An arterial blood gas is a blood test in which a syringe is used to draw a small blood sample from an artery.
The fluid or gas inside the syringe will decrease in temperature, therefore it will decrease in volume. This will cause the syringe piston to slide inside the syringe. This is because of the ideal gas law: PV=nRT. If the pressure (P), the number of moles (n), and the ideal gas constant (R) remains constant, than the change in volume must be proportional to the change in temperature.
Think about what happens to the gas (air) inside the syringe when the temperature decreases. As the gas cools it will occupy a smaller volume and thus the syringe plunger will move DOWN the barrel.