Glauber's salts - meaning and definition. What is Glauber's salts
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What (who) is Glauber's salts - definition

MIXTURE OF SALTS USED IN MICROBIOLOGY
Hank's salts

Glauber's salts      
·- Sulphate of soda, a well-known cathartic. It is a white crystalline substance, with a cooling, slightly bitter taste, and is commonly called "salts.".
Bath salts (drug)         
RECREATIONAL DRUG OFTEN SUPERFICIALLY RESEMBLING TRUE BATH SALTS
Ivory Wave; Incidents involving the drug bath salts; Cloud Nine (drug); Monkey dust (drug); Monkey Dust (Drug); Monkey dust; T salts; Psychoactive bath salts
Bath salts (also psychoactive bath salts, PABS, or in the United Kingdom monkey dust) are a group of recreational designer drugs. The name derives from instances in which the drugs were disguised as bath salts.
Glauber's salt         
  • Temperature dependence of Na<sub>2</sub>SO<sub>4</sub> solubility in water
  • Sodium sulfate used to dry an organic liquid. Here clumps form, indicating the presence of water in the organic liquid.
  • By further application of sodium sulfate the liquid may be brought to dryness, indicated here by the absence of clumping.
CHEMICAL COMPOUND
Glauber's salt; Glauber salt; Sodium sulphate; Glauber's Salt; Salt cake; Na2SO4; Saltcake; Na2so4; Sal mirabilis; E514; Sulphate of soda; Na2O4S; ATC code A06AD13; ATCvet code QA06AD13; ATC code A12CA02; ATCvet code QA12CA02; Sulfate of soda; Disodium sulfate
['gla?b?z, 'gl?:-]
¦ noun a crystalline hydrated form of sodium sulphate, formerly used as a laxative.
Origin
C18: named after the 17th-cent. German chemist Johann R. Glauber.

Wikipedia

Hanks' salts

Hanks' salts is a collective group of salts rich in bicarbonate ions, formulated in 1940 by the microbiologist John H. Hanks. Typically, they are used as a buffer system in cell culture media and aid in maintaining the optimum physiological pH (roughly 7.0–7.4) for cellular growth. Due to their poorly reactive nature and small concentration in solution, Hanks' salts are mainly used in media that are exposed to atmospheric conditions as opposed to CO2 incubation. Performing the latter drastically exceeds the buffer capacity of Hanks' salts and may result in cell death.


The recipe according to AATBIO

Table 1. Required components

  1. Prepare 800 mL of distilled water in a suitable container.
  2. Add 8 g of NaCl to the solution.
  3. Add 400 mg of KCl to the solution.
  4. Add 140 mg of CaCl2 to the solution.
  5. Add 100 mg of MgSO4-7H2O to the solution.
  6. Add 100 mg of MgCl2-6H2O to the solution.
  7. Add 60 mg of Na2HPO4-2H2O to the solution.
  8. Add 60 mg of KH2PO4 to the solution.
  9. Add 1 g of D-Glucose (Dextrose) to the solution.
  10. Add 350 mg of NaHCO3 to the solution.
  11. Add distilled water until volume is 1 L.