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Microscale chemistry



Microscale Chemistry (often referred to as Small-Scale Chemistry, in German:Chemie im Mikromaßstab[1]) is a teaching method widely used at school and at university levels, working with small quantities of chemical substances. While much of traditional chemistry teaching centers on multi-gramme preparations, milligrammes of substances are sufficient for Microscale Chemistry. In Universities modern and expensive lab glass ware is used and modern methods for detection and characterization of the produced substances are very common. In schools and in many countries of the Southern hemisphere small-scale working takes place with low-cost and even no-cost material.There has always been a place for small-scale working in qualitative analysis, but the new developments can encompass much of chemistry a student is likely to meet.

Contents

History

There are two main strands of the modern approach. One is based on the idea that many of the experiments associated with General Chemistry (acids and bases, oxidation and reduction, electrochemistry, etc.) can be carried out in equipment much simpler (injection bottles, dropper bottles, syringes, wellplates, plastic pipettes) and therefore cheaper than the traditional glassware in a laboratory, thus enabling the expansion of the laboratory experiences of students in large classes and to introduce laboratory work into institutions too poorly equipped for standard-type work. Pioneering development in this area was carried out by Egerton C. Grey (1928),[1] Mahmoud K. El-Marsafy (1989)[2] in Egypt, Stephen Thompson in the US[3] and others. A further application of these ideas was the devising by Bradley of the Radmaste kits[4] in South Africa, designed to make effective chemical experiments possible in developing countries in schools that lack the technical services (electricity, running water) taken for granted in many places. The other strand is the introduction of this approach into synthetic work, mainly in organic chemistry. Here the crucial breakthrough was achieved by Mayo, Pike and Butcher[5] and by Williamson[6] who demonstrated that inexperienced students were able to carry out organic syntheses on a few tens of milligrams, a skill previously thought to require years of training and experience. These approaches were accompanied by the introduction of some specialised equipment, which was subsequently simplified by Breuer without great loss of versatility.[7]

There is a great deal of published material available to help in the introduction of such a scheme, providing advice on choice of equipment, techniques and preparative experiments and the flow of such material is continuing through a column in the Journal of Chemical education called ‘The Microscale Laboratory’ that has been running for many years. Scaling down experiments, when combined with modern projection technology, opened up the possibility of carrying out lecture demonstrations of the most hazardous kind in total safety. [8] The approach has been adopted world wide. It has become a major presence on the educational scene in the US, it is used to a lesser extent in the UK and it is used in many countries in institutions with staff who are enthusiastic about it.

Advantages of Microscale Chemistry

  • Saves time for preparation and clear away
  • Reduces waste at the source
  • More safety
  • Lower costs for chemical substances and equipment
  • Smaller storage area
  • Reduced reliance on intensive ventilation systems
  • Pleasant working atmosphere[9]
  • Shorter reaction times
  • More time for evaluation and communication.

Microscale Centres

  • Austria Viktor Obendrauf
  • China Zhou Ning-Huai
  • Egypt Mahmoud K. El-Marsafy
  • Germany Angela Koehler-Kruetzfeld Peter Schwarz Waltraud Habelitz Michael Tausch
  • Hongkong Winghong Chan
  • Israel Mordechai Livneh
  • Japan Kazuko Ogino
  • Mazedonia Metodija Najdoski
  • Mexico Jorge Ibanez, Arturo Fregoso, Carmen Doria, Rosa Maria Mainero, Margarita Hernandez, et al
  • Portugal M. Elisa Maia
  • South Africa John Bradley Marie DuToit
  • Sweden Christer Gruvberg
  • USA
  • USA
  • USA
  • USA
  • Kenneth M. Doxsee
  • Thailand Supawan Tantyanon

Microscale Chemistry Conferences

1st International Symposium on Microscale Chemistry May 2000 at Universidad Iberoamericana - Ciudad de Mexico

2nd International Symposium on Microscale Chemistry 13. - 15. December 2001 at Hong Kong Baptist University - Hong Kong[2]

3rd International Symposium on Microscale Chemistry 18. - 20. May 2005 at Universidad Iberoamericana - Ciudad de Mexico [3]

No-cost and low-cost materials for Primary and Preparatory schools

  • Ampoules, infusion bottles, dropper bottles [4]
  • Micro spiritburner [5]]]
  • Soft drink cans [6]
  • Blister-packings [7]
  • Disposable 1-mL syringes for smallest volumes [8], as measuring cylinder [9], burette and pipette [10]
  • Wellplates [11]
  • 9-Volt battery [12]
  • Two pan scale, weights [13]
  • Beads as models of atoms, molecules, crystal lattices [14], [15]

Materials for Secondary and College levels

  • Materials from Austria (Viktor Obendrauf) [16]
  • Low-cost intrumentation and microscale from HongKong(Winghong Chan) [17]
  • Materials from Germany (Eckhard Baumbach) [18]
  • Materials from South Africa (John D. Bradley) [19]
  • Materials from Swedish Microscale Center (Christer Gruvberg) [20]
  • Materials from National Small-Scale Center USA (Stephen Thompson) [21]
  • Materials from Mexican Microscale Chemistry Center (Jorge Ibanez) [22]

References

  1. ^ Grey, Egerton C (1928). Practical Chemistry by Micro-Methods. Cambridge: W Heffer & Sons Ltd. 
  2. ^ El-Marsafy, M K (1989). Microscale Chemistry Experimentation. MicrEcol. M.K.El-Marsafy. Retrieved on 2006-12-30.
  3. ^ Thompson, S. Small-Scale Chemistry. National Small-Scale Chemistry Centre. Colorado State University. Retrieved on 2006-12-30.
  4. ^ Bradley, J D (1999). "Hands-on practical chemistry for all". Pure Appl. Chem. 71 (5): 817-823. Retrieved on 2006-12-30.
  5. ^ Mayo, D W; R M Pike, S S Butcher (1986). Microscale Organic Laboratory. New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0471824488. 
  6. ^ Williamson, K L (1989). Macroscale and Microscale Organic Experiments. Lexington, Mass: D C Heath. ISBN 0669194298. 
  7. ^ Breuer, S W (1996). Microscale Practical Organic Chemistry. Lancaster University.  The text of the book is available in electronical format free from the author.
  8. ^ MicroMiniSympo06Web. Retrieved on 2006-12-30.
  9. ^ Aleya, H N (1974). Armchair Chemistry. A programmed Laboratory Manual. New Jersey: Princeton University. 
  • Obendrauf, V.; Demonstration [23]
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Microscale_chemistry". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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