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Reddit mentions of Writing the Laboratory Notebook (An American Chemical Society Publication)

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 2

We found 2 Reddit mentions of Writing the Laboratory Notebook (An American Chemical Society Publication). Here are the top ones.

#5 Writing the Laboratory Notebook (An American Chemical Society Publication) #7
Used Book in Good Condition
Specs:
Height6.94 Inches
Length9.92 Inches
Number of items1
Weight0.6393405598 Pounds
Width0.43 Inches
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Found 2 comments on Writing the Laboratory Notebook (An American Chemical Society Publication):

u/McQueeny · 3 pointsr/labrats

I don't think this is exactly what you're looking for, but At The Bench - A Laboratory Navigator has a 10-page chapter about keeping a lab notebook.

Here's a brief Google Books preview; unfortunately it does not cover the relevant chapter.

This presentation(PDF link) cites a book called Writing the Laboratory Notebook by Howard Kanare, which (based on the Amazon reviews) might be more geared towards industry labs but could still be pretty useful in a general sense. You can find out for yourself, since I managed to find a full text copy online(PDF link). I don't think I'm accessing this through any proxies, so it does seem like it's freely available.

For a more thorough investigation of what's out there, you should consult your institution's library; I'm sure someone will be happy to help track down the exact book you are thinking of, or something functionally equivalent.

edit - here's a PDF link to another presentation, just for fun

u/PipettesByMouth · 1 pointr/chemistry

Writing the Laboratory Notebook is a very good resource, though possibly in excess of what your class requires.

The ACS puts its name on it, for whatever that's worth.