bunsun burner
or this bathy thingie were not aloud to touch when the teacher isn't in the room.
You don't specifically use chemicals to produce heat. The only thing you need to produce heat is energy.
Bunsen Burners or oil baths
hot plate
bunsen burner
a Bunsen burner
no
A Bunsen Burner An Electric Mantle A Steam mantle.
The heat of the water acts as a catalysis. Basically this just speeds up the reaction!
Clean up anything used and put away equipment.
A hot plate is an adjustable heating source which is ideal for heating beakers, erlenmeyer flasks, hot water baths, and other flat-bottomed containers. It is essentially an electric stove top that is used in the laboratory.The temperature is adjustable (usually on a scale of 0 to 10) and there is very often a built in spinning magnetic stirrer (to be used in combination with a magnetic star bar) so that you can efficiently stir a solution while heating it. Some have computer controllers to maintain the temperature at an exact level (for instance when using a water or oil bath).A hot plate or heating mantle should always be used in place of a Bunsen burner or other open-flame source to heat a flammable liquid.See the Related Questions and Web Links to the left for more information.
Cleaning up the lab, what school you come from that never teach lab rules......
A Bunsen Burner An Electric Mantle A Steam mantle.
so you can heat things up in a lab quickly
It is called a Crucible
The heat of the water acts as a catalysis. Basically this just speeds up the reaction!
kettles and other plastic things that heat up but dont melt
in the science lab mix blue and yellow then heat up to three.
to heat things up, to hold test tubes while the get heated (mostly to heat things up)
to heat certain things e.g water, rocks etc
Yes because you need the sun to heat up the things that needed to be heated.
Simply wear all necessary lab attire and it will be fine.
It is used to scoop up ground up solid chemicals and to transfer them to a reacting vesicle.
When things get cooled down, they lose the smell of the ingredients used in them. Heat acts as a ingredient itself. When you heat things back up, it brings the main ingredients back to life. You can smell them easier.