FYI: What Is The Most Dangerous Piece Of Laboratory Equipment?
Wear Your Goggles H. Armstrong Roberts/Retrofile/Getty Images Consider the autoclave, which scientists use to sterilize tools and which issues scalding steam to do so. Or consider the heat gun, which is used to dry glassware and to warm distillation devices. It can also ignite anything flammable that gets too close. Glass containers in a vacuum can implode, spraying shards everywhere. Centrifuge rotors can fail, causing explosions that throw shock waves throughout a lab filled with chemicals. Steel vessels built to contain liquids and gases at hundreds of pounds of pressure per square inch can rupture, hurling metal at lab workers. Yet none of these instruments is nearly as dangerous as the only thing found in every single laboratory on earth: us. When lab accidents result in death or serious injury, human error is usually to blame. In 1997, Elizabeth Griffin, a 22-year-old primate researcher at Emory University, wasn't wearing goggles...