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Sand bath



  A sand bath is a common piece of laboratory equipment made from a container filled with heated sand. It is used to provide even heating for another container, most often during a chemical reaction.

A sand bath is most commonly used in conjunction with a hot plate or heating mantle. A beaker is filled with sand or metal pellets (called shot) and is placed on the plate or mantle. The reaction vessel is then partially covered by sand or pellets. The sand or shot then conducts the heat from the plate to all sides of the reaction vessel. This technique allows a reaction vessel to be heated throughout with minimal stirring, as opposed to heating the bottom of the vessel and waiting for convection to heat the remainder, cutting down on both the duration of the reaction and the possibility of side reactions that may occur at higher temperatures.

A variation on this theme, a water bath, can be used to keep a reaction vessel at precisely 100°C at sea level. The sand is replaced with water. The water is boiled and thus will maintain the temperature of 100°C until all water is evaporated (see Standard enthalpy change of vaporization).

Sand baths are one of the oldest known pieces of laboratory equipment, having been used by the alchemists. In older (i.e. Latin) literature, a sand bath is called balneum siccum, balneum cineritium, or balneum arenosum.

References

  1. This article incorporates content from the 1728 Cyclopaedia, a publication in the public domain. [1]

See also

 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sand_bath". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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