Resources - Safety Info
Article 2: Thermometers --- What's Hot and What's
Not
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From November 1992 edition of ‘Crucible’
Volume 23.5
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The current controversy concerning
the classroom use of mercury thermometers and the necessity to substitute
them for a safer alternative has left most of us with a stock of ‘stored’
mercury thermometers and budgets severely stressed in an attempt to purchase
some viable replacements.
We all know that cleanup after a mercury thermometer can
be hazardous (the TLV* for mercury is reached if four mercury thermometers
are broken in a room 12.2 m x 9 .1 m x 2.7 m). It is also a procedure
which can be very costly. It is for these two reasons that many believe
an alternative to the mercury thermometer should be found.
An obvious replacement for the standard mercury thermometer
is the alcohol thermometer. One of the arguments against alcohol thermometers
however is their relative inaccuracy. According to a researcher for the
University of Wisconsin’s Environmental Notes, alcohol thermometers
"have a lower usable range than do mercury thermometers, typically
being accurate only below 300C". The range for the alcohol thermometers
in most catalogues is -20 to 200C. A second problem is the separation
of the alcohol column; however, most catalogues and retailers provide
hints on how to overcome this problem with both alcohol and mercury columns.
A third consideration is cost. The price of an alcohol thermometer depends
on quality, quantity and immersion depth. However, in most cases, their
prices are comparable to mercury thermometers.
The Teflon coating now available for both the mercury
and alcohol thermometers may help to solve the problems of durability
and spill cleanup. The special coating is intended to make the thermometers
shatterproof and resistant to acids and corrosive chemicals.
Digital thermometers are available ranging from -250 to
1 375C for approximately $400, and ranging from -50 to 170C for about
$50 with resolution and precision varying according to price.
Consideration given to factors of cost, safety and efficiency,
the choice is up to you, the Science teacher. Do we use mercury thermometers
and shut down the lab when one is broken? Do we use Teflon coated mercury
thermometers and hope the coating contains the spill if the thermometer
is broken? Do we use alcohol thermometers and sacrifice accuracy above
300C, and clean up the mess of an accident ourselves? Or do we spend a
fortune and get one expensive digital thermometer to be used in five labs
by 200 students and five irate teachers all at once?
Given the alternatives, the STAO Safety Committee recommends
that alcohol thermometers be used by students up to and including grade
10. In senior Science courses, teachers should give serious consideration
to the use of mercury thermometers with Teflon coating. If mercury thermometers
are to be used, a mercury spill procedure must be in place.
* TLV = Threshold Limit Value
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