Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department Polytechnic Institute of New York University ME6213 Introduction to Solid Mechanics 1.Buckling of Columns 2.Deflection of Curved Beams Date of Experiment:_______ Date of Lab Report Submission: _______ This lab report submission is approved by: Amith Deshmukh | Signature:_________ | Bhavesh Joshi | Signature:_________ | Anoop Kumar | Signature:_________ | Sriniket Srinivas Achar | Signature:_________ | Experiment 1 – Buckling of
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Metals Physical Properties of Metals versus Non-metals Properties | Electrical conductivity | Heat conductivity | Melting and Boiling points | Malleability & ductility | Lustre | Metals | Good | Good | High | High | Shiny | Non-metals | Poor | Poor | Low | Low (Brittle) | Dull | Chemical Properties of Metals versus Non-Metals Properties | Metals | Non- metals | Reaction with oxygen | Form basic or amphoteric oxides | Form acidic or neutral oxides | Ionisation | Lose electrons
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CHM1032L pre/post lab instructions Preparation is a key to success in this lab. For this reason‚ you are required to thoroughly read through the experiment information presented in the lab manual‚ and complete a pre-lab for each experiment you do. The prelab must be completed prior to the day of the experiment. Each Friday I will ask to see your completed prelab before I allow you to enter the lab. If you have not finished the pre-lab‚ I will not allow you to enter the lab and you will receive
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Lab report is one way we used during of after an experiment in a laboratory to subtly record and discuss the experiment. During a lab‚ we sometimes can observe only the physical part of the experiment‚ or may be some visible chemical changes. These changes indicate that the experiment we do is successful or not. However‚ in order to understand and achieve more from just simply doing the experiment‚ we write lab report to more profoundly understand the internal meanings of the experiment we do‚ and
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Chem 105 Guide to the Formal Laboratory Report The purpose of a formal report is to communicate effectively to another person the goal‚ procedure‚ data analysis method‚ and results of your laboratory work. The report is divided into several well-defined sections. Each section must be present in a complete report. To earn an outcome point for the laboratory report‚ a student must submit a formal lab report that earns a score of at least 90/100. Each error (factual‚ grammatical‚ typographical
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# Now You See It – Copper Cycle Lab The purpose of the lab is to discover what happens when someone executes a series of procedures‚ beginning with copper metal. What is done | What is observed | 1. Started with copper‚ Cu (s). | reddish‚ brownish‚ orange-ish‚ powder-like | 2. Added nitric acid‚ HNO3 (aq). | acid turns blue and smells like chlorine. | 3. Added water‚ H2O (l). | stayed the same | 4. Added sodium hydroxide‚ NaOH (aq). | changed consistency‚ gel-like | 5. Heated the
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Criteria 6 8 10 Title Your lab report has a Title that is directly related to the lab experiment/ exercise. Your group or class must be able to come up with your own title You must make your own title based on scientific theory Aim You have clearly stated your aim Your aim is relevant and informative You must make your own aim based on scientific theory Background background information relevant to the lab experiment/ exercise You must be able to link your aim to the background The
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I know that some acids are weak and some are strong. A strong acid is one which ionises fully in solution to give hydrogen ions and‚ for example‚ chloride ions or sulphate ions. Sulphuric acid‚ hydrochloric acid and nitric acid are all strong acids. Ethanoic acid is a weak acids. That means that its solution contains a high proportion of molecules that haven’t split into ions. For all the reactions which give off hydrogen‚ the same ionic equation applies - whether the acid is strong or weak: Mg(s)
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the unknown solid into the cylinder with water. We then recorded the new volume and subtracted the two recordings equaling the volume of the unknown. 4. We then calculate the density by dividing the mass by the volume. 5. We then remove the metal cylinder‚ dry it and repeat to get the other two densities. Then record the measurements and density for each trial and then average the densities. Part 2: Calibration of a Buret 1. Get 4 small beakers‚ clean and dry them‚ then record the mass
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concentrations of solutes in and out of the cell. Filtration is what is used to remove solid particles and they can be removed by passing through a liquid and gas. The information above is very important because it is exactly what everything in this lab will be about. It explains in detail what every single little definition and important
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