The pipette is used to draw up fluids, some like using a straw.
A rubber aspirator sucks up liquid into the pipette.
A pipette bulb is the rounded part of a pipette which you squeeze the air out of, then release to draw liquid into the pipette. If you are using a calibrated glass pipette, it will be a separate piece made of rubber which is fitted to the pipette. If it is a simple plastic pipette then the bulb will be made of the same semi-transparent plastic, and the pipette will all be one piece.
A pipette is used to accurately measure and transfer small volumes of liquid in laboratory settings. It is commonly used in chemistry, biology, and clinical research for tasks like preparing samples, dilutions, and dispensing reagents. There are different types of pipettes, such as micropipettes, which can measure volumes as small as microliters.
The rationale of the bead in the WBC pipette is for recognition. Through the white bead present inside the pipette it would be easy for a medical technologist to determine the pipette that should be used for differential counting. Aside from identification purposes, white bead is also used as a signal during the shaking procedure that would indicate that the components inside the pipet are mixed.
The instrument that holds the pipette is called a pipette bulb or a pipette filler. It is used to create suction for drawing liquid into the pipette and controlling its release.
A pipette is a laboratory tool used to accurately measure and transfer small volumes of liquid. It is commonly used in biology, chemistry, and other scientific disciplines for tasks such as mixing reagents, preparing samples, and conducting experiments.
A pipette filter is a tool used to fill pipettes, which are small and sometimes fragile, and thus difficult to fill without any tools. Pipette filters act as funnels that attach to the top of the pipette and have a mechanism to pour into it.
Another name for Pasteur pipette is transfer pipette.
A Mohr pipette is a type of pipette that measures the volume of dispensed liquids. It is less accurate compared to a volumetric pipette.
A 1 ml pipette, a 2 ml pipette, a 5 ml pipette, and a 0.5 ml pipette.
A TD pipette delivers a fixed volume of liquid, while a TC pipette can be adjusted to deliver different volumes.
A micropipette will draw up very small amounts, much smaller than a normal one will