I remember when I was working a temp R&D job, I was walking by a co-workers hood and I saw him mouth pipette some DCM. I just looked at him and said, "What are you doing?". He was a PhD and I was a BS at the time.
Also, as a PhD I worked with a whole host of thiols. The longer the chain or the bigger the ring system the less smelly. That said, when I'd get out of lab my girlfriend would push me into the shower as soon as I got home because I smelled like a skunk. No amount of fume hood can save you.
looks like Blogger doesn't work with anonymous comments from Chrome browsers at the moment - works in Microsoft Edge, or from Chrome with a Blogger account - sorry! CJ 3/21/20
STINKS FOR ANY PURPOSE
ReplyDeletemercapto = Nope for me.
ReplyDeleteseleno = Noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooope!!!
telluro = Time to quit and burn down the building!
DO NOT MOUTH ... . If this was the first part of a tattoo on Stormy Daniels, what would be the next word(s)?
ReplyDeleteSeriously, mouth pipetting of anything should be forbidden in the lab.
In general it has been but you can't stop stupid. (Yes, I'm looking at those biologists that still pipette by mouth).
DeleteMy first job was as a lab tech in my dad's insecticide lab at duPont. That was one habit that I never picked up.
DeleteI remember when I was working a temp R&D job, I was walking by a co-workers hood and I saw him mouth pipette some DCM. I just looked at him and said, "What are you doing?". He was a PhD and I was a BS at the time.
ReplyDeleteAlso, as a PhD I worked with a whole host of thiols. The longer the chain or the bigger the ring system the less smelly. That said, when I'd get out of lab my girlfriend would push me into the shower as soon as I got home because I smelled like a skunk. No amount of fume hood can save you.