Laboratory equipments are of different types. These range from the simplest plastic beakers to pipettes and more complex apparatus. But plastic beakers are the most common of them all and can be found in almost any laboratory environment. Plastic beakers are seen in pathology labs, biochemistry labs, clinical labs, hospitals, blood banks and even in school and college labs where kids carry out text chemistry and biology experiments. The role of plastic beakers is not limited to pedantic applications as cited above; there are situations when these plastic beakers play pivotal roles in life critical applications.
A huge challenge in any laboratory is dealing with the immensely varied activities. It would be quite impractical to find lab equipment for each individual activity. Not only does that entail large costs, it also makes it tedious for scientist, students and medical professionals to keep a tab on the specificity of all the disparate apparatus, not to mention the effort it will take to train new people to handle and use all these different objects.
Plastic beakers are the perfect solution to all these different requirements. Plastic beakers manufactured using reusable polypropylene and TPX-Polymethylpentene can be put to use in all applications safely and satisfactorily. In fact, beakers have been around since prehistoric times. Back then; ‘Bicarium’ or drinking vessels were used for drinking fluids. But there was one specialty about these vessels which made them the first choice for curious minds who loved experimenting and making new substances and that was the fact that beakers allowed fluid to be measured in accurate amounts. With the invention of polymers, plastic beakers became common and widespread. Interestingly, plastic beakers did not remain confined with the constraints of the lab; soon it was used in kitchens as well. This gave rise to the need for beakers to be better, stronger, graded and easy to maintain. Modern plastic beakers are not only perfect for carrying out experiments in laboratories; it allows cooks to minutely measure their ingredients.
Traditionally, beakers were made of glass. These were treated to handle freezing temperatures as easily as boiling temperatures without cracking or endangering the experimenter to any harm. Today, plastic beakers are commonly made of PMP or PP. This way the price of the apparatus can be controlled and more importantly it adds to the strength and durability of the equipments. Beakers are made and sold by scientific supply companies and companies that specialize in supplying scientific glassware.