Difference between revisions of "Lugol's iodine"

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An aqueous solution of iodine/iodide composed of 0.5 g of [[iodine]] and 1.0 g of [[potassium iodide]] dissolved in 50 ml of water. Lugol's iodine is used to remove excess [[mercuric chloride]] fixatives from tissue preparations. Lugol's iodine has also been used to remove blackened [[mercuric sulfide, black|mercuric sulfide]] stains from herbarium sheets (Hawks and Bell 1999).
 
An aqueous solution of iodine/iodide composed of 0.5 g of [[iodine]] and 1.0 g of [[potassium iodide]] dissolved in 50 ml of water. Lugol's iodine is used to remove excess [[mercuric chloride]] fixatives from tissue preparations. Lugol's iodine has also been used to remove blackened [[mercuric sulfide, black|mercuric sulfide]] stains from herbarium sheets (Hawks and Bell 1999).
  
== Additional Information ==
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==Resources and Citations==
  
° C.Hawks, D.Bell, "Removal of Stains Caused by Mercuric Chloride Treatments from  Herbarium Sheet Labels" in ICOM Preprints, Lyon, 1999. p. 723-727.
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* C.Hawks, D.Bell, "Removal of Stains Caused by Mercuric Chloride Treatments from  Herbarium Sheet Labels" in ICOM Preprints, Lyon, 1999. p. 723-727.
  
 
[[Category:Materials database]]
 
[[Category:Materials database]]

Latest revision as of 15:17, 26 September 2022

Description

An aqueous solution of iodine/iodide composed of 0.5 g of Iodine and 1.0 g of Potassium iodide dissolved in 50 ml of water. Lugol's iodine is used to remove excess Mercuric chloride fixatives from tissue preparations. Lugol's iodine has also been used to remove blackened mercuric sulfide stains from herbarium sheets (Hawks and Bell 1999).

Resources and Citations

  • C.Hawks, D.Bell, "Removal of Stains Caused by Mercuric Chloride Treatments from Herbarium Sheet Labels" in ICOM Preprints, Lyon, 1999. p. 723-727.