A wide mouth reagent bottle is used to store compounds. These compounds are mostly solids or those that are very thick in consistency.
gas collection by displacement of water
Use a pipette.
To ensure no other chemicals get into the bottle and react with the solid you are trying to use.
This is to prevent contamination of the remaining reagent in the bottle.
So you don't get water, dirt or other contaminants in the reagent bottle. The reagent bottle should contain chemicals that are as pure as possible. If each person put a dirty spatula in the bottle, the reagent bottle would very quickly accumulate all kinds of junk, ruining the chemicals inside or causing hazardous chemical reactions.
A Reagent Bottle.
It is a heavy glass bottle (unlikely to break or react with the reagent chemicals) used to store moderate amounts of laboratory chemicals (reagents)
yes
Your question supplies its own answer, though you may need to ensure the bottle's material will withstand the intended reagent.
The reagent bottle is not used for dropping, having only a common stopper.
Use a pipette.
A spatula would be used to remove 0.25 grams of a solid material from a reagent bottle.
Widemouth gambusia was created in 1975.
No. One reagent does not dissolve or react with all compounds. If it did, it would dissolve the bottle you placed it in.
used as a container where you put chemicals that can't be thrown in the sink.
To ensure no other chemicals get into the bottle and react with the solid you are trying to use.
If the cover of a reagent bottle is placed on a table with the bottom down, it can pick up material from the table which would contaminate the contents of the reagent bottle after the cap is put back on the bottle.
The area of Boscastle to Widemouth is 6,390,000.0 square meters.