Alright, the title of this post is a lie: I'm not known for being strong; I'm actually known for being incredibly weak. I'm a six-foot dude with a 130-pound body (that corresponds to about a 60% difference in height-percentile and weight-percentile), I definitely don't go to the gym, and in AP English Language class last year, I lost every single arm wrestle during the end-of-the-year party. But these past two weeks made me look like The Rock with how strong my will (and my muscles - sort of) were.
In the last post, I told you all that a disgusting endeavor was in the process - and it was disgusting, indeed. Remember those P. auriofaciens? Those bacteria that convert nitrate into nitrous oxide? Well, we finished all of the denitrification runs that we had planned for the samples that we currently had, and the jars that bacteria were in needed to be cleaned up! Of course, these are a bunch of dead bacteria, so they smell awful.
To clean the jars, we add bleach to the dead bacteria to ensure that all of the bacteria are actually dead, which, to my surprise, actually makes the smell much worse. Having the ability to stay alive while cleaning the jars was an accomplishment, even if half of the cleaning was done under a fume hood.
All of the bacteria-filled liquid gets put into these containers, where we add bleach and dump it into the sink (which is unfortunately not under the fume hood). |
After the jars go into the bleach, we rinse them off and stick them into a hydrochloric acid mix, where they sit for a day.
You're gonna need thick gloves before you stick your hands in this stuff, because 0.5M HCl is pretty strong. |
Quite the balancing act. |
It used to be a husk-shaped husk, until I absolutely beasted and feasted on it. |
to the different sediment samples so that they would be completely submerged.
Five of the fifteen mixtures created - pretty murky, if you ask me. |
The mixes getting filtered so that all that's left is the water and the sample's nutrients - definitely one of the coolest things I've done in the lab. |
It took quite a while for the pH reading to even out. |
Speaking of my final presentation (that transition though), remember that the SRP final presentation day is Saturday, May 6th, starting at 9 am, at BASIS Flagstaff! My presentation is at 4 pm.
However, just because my final presentation is this coming Saturday, I'll continue to post on this blog (hopefully biweekly, if not weekly) because the awesome staff at the lab is allowing me to continue interning over the entire summer!
Looking forward to seeing you this Saturday at BASIS, and if not, to seeing you on the next post!
End of Chapter Ten.