Posts Tagged ‘chemistry’
SUNWARD PHARMACEUTICAL SDN BHD: Lab Technician (Microbiology / Chemistry)
Written by WTJ on May 31, 2008 – 11:57 am -Here’s another microbiology or chemistry lab technician job offered by Sunward Pharmaceutical Sdn. Bhd.
Lab Technician (Microbiology / Chemistry)
(Johor - Johor Bahru)Requirements:
* Candidate must possess SPM / STPM in Science and above.
* Candidate with certificate & above in Microbiology/Chemistry/Science & Technology or equivalent are encouraged to apply.
* Fresh graduates are encouraged to apply.
* Computer literate.
* Bilingual - English/Bahasa Malaysia/Mandarin.
* Applicants must be willing to work in Johor Bahru.
* Applicants should be Malaysian citizens.We adopt a 5-day work week.
The closing date is 28th June 2008. For more infomation please visit Jobstreet.
Popularity: 2% [?]
Tags: chemistry, job, johor, johor bahru, lab technician, microbiology, sunward pharmaceutical, sunward pharmaceutical sdn bhd
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Rock Dissolved
Written by WTJ on May 27, 2008 – 6:26 pm -Back in secondary school, “acid rain” was one of my presentation topics. The fact that acid rain erode and ruined the statues and buildings amazed me. Why is it happening?
What is acid rain?
Distilled water which is neutral has pH 7. Anything that is less than pH 7 is considered as acidic. Normal rain which is unpolluted is slightly acidic, somewhere around pH 5.6. This is due to the reaction of carbon dioxide and water forming carbonic acid.

[pic]
Acid rain is the result of human activity. It is normally used to refer to the acidic deposition in rain, snow, dew, fog, or dry particles. There are different types of acidic precipitation that can be found in acid rain, which are:
- Sulfurous acid [H2O2 (aq) + H2SO3 (aq) → H2SO4 (aq) + H2O (l)]
- Sulfuric acid [H2SO4]
- Nitric acid [3NO2 (g) + H2O → 2HNO3 (aq) + NO (g)]
Normal rainwater is however weakly acidic because rainwater contains dissolved CO2 from the air.
What is rock?
Rock here is referred to marble and limestone, which are both consisted of calcium carbonate, CaCO3 (just like eggshell). They are commonly used in architecture, especially in constructing buildings, monuments and statues. However calcium carbonate is reactive to acid solutions. When acid rains have contact with the limestone or marble, they will erode.
For example, limestone building contacts with sulfuric acid rain.
CaCO3 (n) [building] + H2SO4 (aq) [acid rain] → Ca2+ (aq) + SO42- (aq) + H2O + CO2
Limestone or marble (calcium carbonate) buildings or monuments surface will be damaged and destroyed due to erosion. Image (right) showed the corrosive effects of acid rain and wind that damage the carving of St. Peter (source). The cleaning of limestone buildings cannot be done with acid-based cleaning chemicals. Only neutral or mild alkaline-based cleaner can be used to clean the buildings or monuments.
Experiment
Simple experiment can be done to observe the effect of acid rain on limestone. All you need are:
- 3 drinking glasses
- lemon juice
- vinegar
- water
- 3 chalks
Procedures:
- Fill glass 1 with 1/2 glass of lemon juice, glass 2 with 1/2 glass of vinegar, and 1/2 glass of water in glass 3.
- Then chuck one piece of chalk into each glasses (make sure part of the chalk is in the liquid).
- Check the glasses few days later.
After couple of days, you will see that the chalks in the lemon and vinegar glasses are dissolved. This is due to the calcium carbonate (chalk is consisted on calcium carbonate) reacts with the acids in lemon juice and vinegar.
Chinese Idiom.
There is a Chinese idiom “the drops of water penetrate the rock”.
Rock bastard, “Hey, what are you doing here?”
Water, “I want to pass through you.”
Rock bastard, “Haha, what makes you think you can pass through me? You are just a tiny little rain drop.”
Water, “I will pass through you! You just need to wait and see!”
After thousands of years, the water finally made a hole through the rock and passed through it.
The meaning of this idiom is to show that if you have power of perseverance, you can do anything.
England’s White Cliffs of Dover
England’s White Cliffs of Dover is composed of chalk (calcium carbonate) and the cliff face erodes at the rate of one centimetre per year. If you lean against the cliffs, your body will be covered with white powder.
Popularity: 2% [?]
Tags: acid rain, calcium carbonate, chalk, chemistry, experiment, lemon juice, limestone, marbel, rock, vinegar, white cliffs of dover
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Let The Kids Decide
Written by WTJ on May 17, 2008 – 12:03 pm -Tags: alchemy, astrology, astronomy, chemistry, comic, magic, neurology, phrenology, physics
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Three Discovery Channel DVD I Bought from China
Written by WTJ on January 2, 2008 – 5:10 pm -I bought these three DVDs from Guangzhou, China. They are Discovery Channel’s DVDs.

1. 100 Greatest Discoveries: Chemistry
Sometimes blue and red fluids mixed together do not just result in a purple fluid but can result in the creation of an exciting white powder. This is the magic of chemistry which studies the reactions and transformations of the various substances found in the world. Chemical compounds combine in different ways allowing sugar to be sweet and steel to be strong. From the early work of Dalton and Priestley to modern scientific quest to create atomic particles, explore the top discoveries in the world of Chemistry.
2. 100 Greatest Discoveries: Biology
Biology is concerned with the characteristics and behaviors of organisms, how species and individuals come into existence and the interactions they have with each other and with their environment. The history of biology traces the study of the living world from ancient to modern times. Biology was revolutionized when Robert Brown identified the cell nucleus through his studies on orchids. Scientists continued to make significant breakthroughs in biology including Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection and how neurotransmitters allow cells to communicate with the body.
3. 100 Greatest Discoveries: Genetics
From the first ideas about inherited characteristics in plants to the complete sequencing of the human genome, discover why certain traits are passed through families and species in the amazing science of genetics. Find out how DNA carries the genetic information that encodes proteins and enables cell to reproduce and perform their functions. Join this program to learn the major discoveries and experiments from Mendel’s peas to the 21st century’s genetic age of the Human Genome Project.
Do you know how cheap these original DVDs are? They costed RMB 15 each, and the total of three is RMB 45, which is less than USD 7.
Popularity: 2% [?]
Tags: biology, chemistry, china, discovery channel, DVD, genetics
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Bouncy Egg
Written by WTJ on August 1, 2007 – 4:53 pm -All you need are:
- One Glass (big enough to put an egg in, not your shot glass for drinking)
- One Raw Egg
- Vinegar
What you need to do:
- Put the egg in the glass and soak with vinegar. (Make sure it is fully covered by vinegar)
- Leave them for few hours and you can observe the changing of the egg.
- When the egg fizz, take it out and squeeze it softly, does it feel like rubber ball?
- Leave the egg back to the vinegar for another week.
- After one week, take the egg out and drop it on a bowl, and guess what happen? It bounces!
What are the uses of this simple experiment to do bouncy egg?
- If you are too poor to buy a rubber ball to play.
- You can compete with your friends and see whose eggs bounced higher. (Call the game “who-is-the-ballless-one”)
- You simply just scare your friends with these eggs.
- You can use these eggs during the protest, in stead of breaking all the eggs you throwing at their windows, try to reuse the eggs.
Why is it happening?
The process called ‘decalcification’ occured when the egg soaked in the vinegar. Vinegar (acetic acid) actually reacted with the calcium carbonate of the eggshell. When the egg soaked in the vinegar and began to fizz, it indicated the reaction was happening and vinegar dissolved the eggshell. The reaction is as following
2CH3COOH (acetic acid a.k.a. vinegar) + CaCO3 (calcium carbonate a.k.a. eggshell) → H2O (water) + CO2 (carbon dioxide, which was the fizz) + Ca(CH3COO)2 (Bouny eggshell)
Instead of using egg, you can also try to use bones to do this and give your dog a good bite. Maybe you can make bouncing bones and sell to your local toy stores.
Found this video at metacafe:
Make Amazing Bouncy Egg! - For more amazing video clips, click here(Picture)
Popularity: 2% [?]
Tags: bouncy egg, chemistry, egg, experiment
Posted in General | 4 Comments »
Lab Technician (Microbiology / Chemistry)



