Today is National Bunsen Burner Day, a good time to explore the device's connection to Cedar Rapids. Bunsen burners are used in laboratories to produce an open gas flame for heating and sterilization.
I have a soft spot in my heart for the Bunsen burner. Many years ago, I was trying desperately to finish research for my doctoral degree. I spent Christmas vacation in the lab at the university, only ...
The Flame 100 is ideally suited for all flame related applications in the laboratory. The 15 millimeter precision flame allows graduated heating of dental tools as well as safe sterilization of ...
In 1993, I pursued a pre-nursing degree at Crafton Hills College and took an introductory course in microbiology with a lab component. Tying back long hair was a standard safety practice in the lab.
Watch the restoration of a rare antique Buffalo dental Bunsen burner, brought back to life after years of neglect. After carefully saving and restoring it, we put it to the test by actually cooking on ...
THE Bunsen burner is one of those simple and ingenious contrivances that could only have emanated from the brain of a practical genius. Unlike some of his successors to-day, Bunsen was never a ...
IIIF provides researchers rich metadata and media viewing options for comparison of works across cultural heritage collections. Visit the IIIF page to learn more. Raised letters on the iron base of ...
Racks of several Bunsen burners hooked together were often termed combustion furnaces or trains. This 25-jet example was used by chemists at Johns Hopkins University. It may date from the 1920s, ...
If you need to measure the temperature of something, chances are good that you could think up half a dozen ways to do it, pretty much all of which would involve some kind of thermometer, thermistor, ...