Bottles & Jars Glass
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$36.00 – $1,957.00
Clear Glass Reagent Screw Cap Bottles/ Media Bottles: Made from BOROSILICATE 3.3 glass, making it heat and chemical resistant. These bottles come with an autoclavable screw cap & ‘O’ Ring*. ...
$31.00 – $33.00
Brush, specially made to clean Beakers/Bottles. The nylon bristles are great for cleaning all sorts of surfaces. It is also very flexible, you can bend it around for hard-to-reach places. This brush comes...
$40.00 – $1,142.00
Reagent bottles CLEAR GLASS narrow mouth are made from BOROSILICATE 3.3 glass and comes with a ground joint and flat pressed glass stopper. These bottles are ideal for safely storing...
$66.00 – $2,479.00
Amber-coated glass Reagent Screw Cap Bottles are made from BOROSILICATE 3.3, making them heat and chemical resistant. These bottles come with an autoclavable screw cap and pouring ring. Screw Cap is...
$49.00 – $131.00
Apothecary Reagent bottles CLEAR GLASS wide mouth are made from glass and come with a flat pressed glass stopper. These bottles are ideal for safely storing chemicals in liquid or powder...
$72.00 – $163.00
Dropping Bottles with Ground In Pipette Borosilicate Clear Glass have precise pipettes enable accurate and measured liquid dispensing, key for various scientific experiments. They are made for reliable and exact...
$11.00 – $40.00
McCartney Bottles, also known as McCartney jars or McCartney vessels, are specialized glassware used in laboratory settings, particularly in the field of chemistry. They are commonly used for high-temperature and...
$56.00 – $327.00
Pycnometer Density Specific Gravity Bottles are specialized laboratory glassware for determining densities and specific gravities of liquids. These containers feature predetermined volumes for precise measurement and calculation of density and...
$294.00 – $2,806.00
Gas washing bottles with a head purify gases or remove moisture. Their built-in head improves gas flow, enabling efficient removal of any impurities or moisture.A crucial tool in chemical reactions,...
$131.00 – $2,610.00
Amber Reagent Bottles are a critical part of many laboratory settings, protecting the contents from UV light degradation that can harm light-sensitive compounds. The amber hue of the bottles helps...
$85.00 – $124.00
BOD (Biochemical Oxygen Demand) Bottles are made to measure the amount of oxygen consumed by microorganisms when decomposing organic matter in water. These bottles offer an unchanging and inert atmosphere for...
$59.00 – $216.00
Reagent Bottle With Wide Mouth Apothecary Amber These wide-mouthed amber-coated glass apothecary reagent bottles are made of high-quality glass and come with a flat-pressed glass stopper. The absence of any...
Bottles: Versatile Containers for Every Purpose
Laboratory bottles, such as reagent media bottles, stoppered bottles, BOD bottles, dropping bottles, wide mouth bottles, McCartney bottles, and gas washing head bottles, are critical for storing, handling, and processing chemicals, samples, and reagents in laboratory settings. Each type of bottle is designed for specific purposes, ensuring safety, precision, and efficiency in experiments or analyses. Below, I explain why these bottles are needed and their specific roles:
General Purpose of Laboratory Bottles
Lab bottles are used to:
- Store and Contain: Safely store liquids, solids, or gases, protecting them from contamination or degradation.
- Dispense and Measure: Facilitate controlled dispensing or measurement of reagents or samples.
- Specialized Functions: Support specific experimental needs, such as biological oxygen demand (BOD) testing or gas washing.
- Safety and Durability: Made of materials like borosilicate glass or chemically resistant plastics to withstand harsh chemicals, temperature changes, or pressure.
Specific Bottles and Their Purposes
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Reagent Media Bottles:
- Purpose: Store and dispense reagents, media (e.g., for microbial cultures), or solutions used in chemical or biological experiments.
- Why Needed: These bottles often have screw caps or stoppers for secure sealing, preventing contamination or evaporation. They are autoclavable, making them ideal for sterile applications, such as storing nutrient media for microbiology.
- Example Use: Storing prepared agar solutions or chemical reagents like acids or bases.
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Stoppered Bottles:
- Purpose: General-purpose bottles with ground glass stoppers for airtight storage of liquids or solids.
- Why Needed: The tight-fitting stopper prevents leakage, evaporation, or contamination, making them suitable for long-term storage of volatile or sensitive substances.
- Example Use: Storing volatile solvents like ether or sensitive chemicals that react with air.
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BOD (Biochemical Oxygen Demand) Bottles:
- Purpose: Used in environmental testing to measure the oxygen consumed by microorganisms in water samples over a set period (typically 5 days).
- Why Needed: These bottles have specific designs (e.g., tapered stoppers, precise volumes of 300 mL) to ensure accurate sealing and minimal oxygen exchange, critical for reliable BOD measurements in water quality analysis.
- Example Use: Testing wastewater to assess organic pollution levels.
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Dropping Bottles:
- Purpose: Dispense small, controlled amounts of liquid, typically drop by drop.
- Why Needed: Equipped with a dropper or pipette tip, these bottles allow precise addition of reagents, which is essential in titrations or reactions requiring small volumes.
- Example Use: Adding indicators in acid-base titrations or dispensing small amounts of reagents in qualitative analysis.
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Wide Mouth Bottles:
- Purpose: Store and handle solids, powders, or viscous liquids, with a large opening for easy filling and cleaning.
- Why Needed: The wide mouth allows for easy access, pouring, or scooping of materials, making them ideal for bulk storage or frequent use.
- Example Use: Storing solid chemicals like salts or viscous liquids like oils.
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McCartney Bottles:
- Purpose: Small, screw-capped glass bottles used primarily in microbiology for storing small volumes of media, cultures, or samples.
- Why Needed: Their small size (e.g., 7–30 mL) and secure screw caps make them ideal for culturing microorganisms or storing samples under sterile conditions. They are autoclavable and reusable.
- Example Use: Growing bacterial cultures or storing small biological samples.
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Gas Washing Head Bottles:
- Purpose: Used to clean or purify gases by passing them through a liquid (e.g., water, acid, or base) in a specialized bottle with a gas inlet and outlet.
- Why Needed: The bottle traps impurities or reacts with specific gas components, ensuring the gas is purified before use in experiments or analysis. The design includes a fritted disc or tube to maximize gas-liquid contact.
- Example Use: Removing acidic impurities from a gas stream by bubbling it through a basic solution.
Why These Bottles Are Essential
- Specialized Design: Each bottle type is tailored for specific tasks (e.g., BOD bottles for environmental testing, dropping bottles for precision dispensing), ensuring accuracy and efficiency.
- Material Durability: Most lab bottles are made of borosilicate glass (resistant to thermal shock and chemicals) or high-quality plastics, suitable for harsh lab conditions.
- Contamination Prevention: Secure closures (screw caps, stoppers, or droppers) prevent contamination, evaporation, or spills, critical for sensitive experiments.
- Versatility: Bottles accommodate a wide range of substances—liquids, solids, gases, or biological samples—across chemistry, biology, and environmental science.
- Safety: Airtight seals and robust materials reduce the risk of leaks or reactions with air, protecting both the sample and the user.
Practical Considerations
- Joint and Closure Types: Bottles may have ground glass joints, screw caps, or droppers to suit different sealing needs.
- Sterilization: Many bottles (e.g., reagent media, McCartney) are autoclavable for sterile applications.
- Volume and Size: Bottles come in various sizes to match experimental needs, from small McCartney bottles (7 mL) to large reagent bottles (1 L or more).
- Labeling: Clear or amber glass options protect light-sensitive contents, and labeling areas ensure proper identification.