Using Hydrochloric Acid (Good)

By Anonymous (not verified), 16 March, 2026
Using Hydrochloric Acid (HCl) Hydrochloric acid is either concentrated or diluted. Handle it carefully because it burns! Storage: Keep hydrochloric acid in glass bottles. Also keep it away from metal because it will corrode metals and could make hydrogen gas. Protection: Wearing safety glasses is a good idea. Using latex gloves and old clothes makes sense, too. Wearing short-sleeved shirts, shorts, or sandals is a bad idea. Breathing the fumes can knock you out! When acid spills on your skin, rinse it with water for a few minutes. Use a gauze bandage for small burns. With serious burns, go to a doctor. Uses: In the lab, you will either dilute or titrate hydrochloric acid. When diluting, pore the acid into the water. Doing it the other way isn’t safe. In titration, use a buret to measure what HCl you need to react with sodium hydroxide or sodium carbonate. Your measurement of the base will be right, then. Disposal: Neutralize leftover HCl by mixing the acid with a sodium hydroxide solution. Flush it down the drain. Cover a spill of HCl with baking soda. After the fizzing stops, sweep up the soda and put it in the garbage or drain.
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Workplace Writing Rubric

Name:

Title:

Ideas

The writing . . .

  • has a clear, central message.
  • provides details that support the central message.

Organization

  • begins by capturing the reader’s interest and introducing the message.
  • develops the message in the middle paragraphs.
  • ends by reviewing the message or making a call to action.

Voice

  • sounds knowledgeable and informed.
  • speaks in a voice appropriate to the audience.

Word Choice

  • uses precise nouns and active verbs.

Sentence Fluency

  • uses a variety of sentence lengths and beginnings.
  • flows smoothly from one sentence to another.

Conventions

  • uses end punctuation and commas correctly.
  • correctly capitalizes first words and proper nouns.
  • avoids spelling errors.
  • correctly uses words (there, they’re, their).
  • follows the correct format for the type of message.

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