Why you need to wear safety glasses - Periodic Table of Videos
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- čas přidán 4. 11. 2018
- We use some cherry tomatoes and Krakatoa Tubes in a classic demonstration of the value of safety goggles.
More links and info in full description ↓↓↓
Krakatoa on Objectivity: • Krakatoa - Objectivity 84
Previous Krakatoa Tubes video: • Krakatoa Tubes - Perio...
Thanks to Professor Andy Beeby, University of Durham, for a gift of the specially-made Krakatoa tubes for this video.
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From the School of Chemistry at The University of Nottingham: bit.ly/NottChem
With thanks to the Garfield Weston Foundation.
Periodic Videos films are by video journalist Brady Haran: www.bradyharan.com/
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“You can’t throw away your eyeballs more than once”
Wise words!
Well, you CAN... as long as it's one at a time. 🤔
Nope! You can’t, as the quote mentions eyeballs as a plural. However, if you were a spider, you could remove your eyes 4 times 🕷
There are times I wished I could after seeing some of the comments in CZcams Videos.
Jack Linde - I hope my comment doesn’t quality as eyeball-removing. Oh wait.. it does
You can, just pick them out of the trash can and throw again.
When Neil says "whoa" calmly, you know its serious.
bit of an understated reaction
thats neil for you
But you _thought_ about getting real eyeballs.
That's why I love you guys.
@@mistaowickkuh6249 woooosh
There's a Hungarian saying for this, which sounds really cool in its original language, I'll try my best to give an English equivalent: "better an eyeglass today, than a glass eye tomorrow."
That works perfectly well in English. Thank you-I'm going to use that.
Yeah that's pretty perfect localization.
That's actually pretty rad, thanks for sharing Kanya!
Science teachers need to show this video to all of their pupils.
thats exactly what im going to do!
Eye see what you did there...
Cornea joke, but eye like it.
Their pupils will definitely benefit sharply from it
hehe pupils ....
This should be a requisite training video for all students and industry professionals. This really REALLY reinforces the absolute requirement for safety glasses at a MINIMUM.
Brian Streufert ...no it shouldn’t. Safety glasses are obvious, no need to play yet another video to hundreds of thousands of people.
Brian Streufert
You must be fun at parties.
@@colin-campbell Your mom and I are usually the life of the party.
@@aluisious Your opinion is duly noted.
Brian Streufert
She’s not fun at parties.
Eye opening experience.
Wow
Open your eyes, before glass shards close them forever.
Ah, I was wearing glasses, my eyes weren't opened.
hello mr president
Much better than an eye losing experience.
Never go without them. I can't see myself losing my vision.
You wouldnt be able to without eyes!
@@mrslinkydragon9910 My point, exactly
I never wear safety glasses , I don't see your point.
Beepis lol
@@PetrFlosman But the point would see you, Haha
"new meaning to getting your eyes peeled" LOL
Get a mannequin head and stick the tomatoes and safety glasses on it
Savage af
Top KEK
"You can't throw away your eyeballs... more than once" - Professor Sir Martyn Poliakoff 2018
Exactly, you can, but only once, hahaha
Not just flying pieces of glass, a single drop of any concentrated strong acid and it's over as well. Even some solvents would blind you right away. In my opinion, glasses are even more important than gloves!
Or strong caustic. (I was calling the surgery; other people were hosing him down under the emergency shower. I heard afterwards that their prompt action saved some of the sight in one of his eyes.)
I never trusted safety glasses, only goggles.
At my university we dont even use gloves, if not strongly indicated like when you use bromine or smth.
@@mikesummers-smith4091 Yeah, bases in unprotected situations scare me far worse than acids do.
@@moskon95 I was always taught to make adequate risk-assessments for myself. Thick rubber gloves are recommended for handling strong acids, but the lack of fine motor skills as a result of using those gloves can create an even more hazardous situation. So I can see why you would opt not to wear them. Just consider the risks involved in what you're doing beforehand, and act accordingly.
> In my opinion, glasses are even more important than gloves!
You're saying that like it is an controversial statement. I would say that's unquestionably true.
I wish I could see this video but sadly I had an accident and my eyeballs had to be replaced by tomatoes
@marcus m sounds delicious
I had a friend drilling hardened steel with a carbide tipped high speed steel bit. He was leaning in close, dripping oil into the hole from an oil can. The drill bit hit a slag inclusion in the metal, binding it. The drill bit failed catastrophically, and a piece of the drill bit stuck in his heavy apron, sharp end first. Another, larger piece flew into his safety glasses, knocked them askew and gouged a piece of polycarbonate out and leaving the groove slightly blackened. Another fragment slightly injured his finger, which he wiped off and put on an adhesive bandage. He would have been much more seriously injured without safety gear, and would probably have lost vision in one eye from this incident.
As an ophthalmologist, I really appreciate this video. Quite apart from the danger of acid and (worse) alkali burns, penetrating injury can be blinding, even when the particle involved is tiny. The merest speck of intraocular iron, for example, will set up a chronic inflammatory reaction that has the potential to cause blindness weeks or months after the initial event. Infective endophthalmitis is also a possibility if even a single viable bacterium is carried into the eye by a penetrating foreign body.
“Two of the tomatoes are wearing safety glasses”
😂
Sounds like the beginning of a joke.
Sentences like this are the reason I watch this.
Zylon FPV what are you doing here
Maxiemus FPV I watch more than FPV 🙂
I am as American as ... stupidity... but after watching this video and then reading your comment... the narrative voice in my head said tomatoes in the British manner, but my inside-my-head robot-neutral American accent.
This should be shown in every school and college throughout!
It should
very much so! Safety first!
The first experiment at every lab!
Totally. So simple yet so powerful imagery, for something so serious.
I worked in a workshop and right above the lathe there was a pair of safety glasses exposed with a nail stuck one inch into one lens. The person which eyes were saved hanged the goggles to be seen by everybody as a reminder of what could have happened if he wasn't wearing them.
After watching this, some people will still refuse to wear safety glasses/goggles.
Darwin had a theory about those sorts of choices...
The Gene pool needs some Chlorine every so often.
I refuse to wear safety glasses.
I'll wear a full face shield
Full face shield, goggles, full hazmat with respirator, kevlar...
I mean what if someone has mixed up the sodium and the potassium?
True, but it might convince some people to wear safety glasses. If it saves just one person's vision, job well done.
In high school, my woodshop teacher put up a picture next to the safety googles. It was a x-ray of a man with a nail in his skull. Underneath it was a note that said "Don't let this happen to you. Wear eye protection."
When I was in school, our woodshop teacher gave us a safety lesson after he came back from the midyear holidays missing a finger
Even back in elementary school science class in the 1970's we wore them. Back then they were clunky plexiglass goggle things but thankfully we never had to test them out. Personally I still prefer the goggles as the cover the sides of your eyes too and you can wear them with prescription glasses.
Same here. I use Bolle ones most often.
Goggles are better- much lower chance of ricochet fragments getting into the eyes.
(and make sure they fit properly- I've sparks from a disc cutter bounce through the gap between goggle and nose before.
Goggles are far better imo, more protection and usually more comfortable too.
Plexiglass shatters easily, they were polycarbonate goggles.
Not related to this video, but Brady, will you ever make an engineering channel? Like computerphile but for mechanical, civil, electrical engineering etc. ? I am pretty sure the engineering departments at Nottingham and Oxford would have tons of interesting things to talk about.
Where's the love for the chemical engineering bois?!
@Roddy MacPhee sixty symbols has little to do with engineering, it's more of a theoretical physics. Seeing some applications with basic or in-depth explanations would be fun indeed.
I agree! Convince them!
Considering the number of times my eyes have been saved from small flying objects just by wearing simple, smallish specs, I can attest to even minor obstructions preventing major pain.
Wear the damn goggles people. Makes you look cool - at least to all the science folk.
@@samarnadra probably helped keep your clothes clean as well.
I agree with the comments below about science teachers showing this to pupils. However this video should be shown in every Health & Safety training as an example of why H&S exists and everyone who has the training should before the video be given a pair of cherry tomatoes to look after before the start of the training. See how many are safe by the end.
This reminds me of the old astronomy joke. How many times can you see the Sun through a telescope? Twice... once if you use binoculars...
well, I did watch the Sun through binoculars (not very strong pair, but still). Not something nice. I also did watch a solar eclipse (total) without protection when I was 10. Took me 3 days to be able to read again, all I could see were shiny clouds
@@samarnadra I take it eclipse goggles are ok for welding though?
@@samarnadra I know, I ment I looked into the sun from the very begining of the eclipse, not just the totality phase; however, I wouldn't do it again without protection
SuperAnelOfGlory, have your eyes checked every few years for macula degeneration. It's a real possibility, after that experience.
@@RWBHere I had, they seem to be OK so far
I'm looking forward to other episodes in the series "tomatoes, safety glasses and dangerous things" where you pour acid on tomatoes, shine lasers on them, vapors, heat, cold, shockwaves, flames, spilled chemicals, etc!
"Tomatoes in Danger XIV: Tomatoes vs. a Hydraulic Press"
"Tomatoes in Danger XXVII: Tomatoes vs. Gravity (The Fall of Romas)"
I want this too. Great idea. Also don't run with scissors and don't swing sharp or heavy or fragile objects around.
Do put a cat into a microwave when it is a food item in your culture. Or eat a dog, no discrimination!
Thank you guys so much for all you do. I wish more universities would produce material like this. Free exchange of knowledge is what the internet and CZcams is all about. A grateful world thanks you from the bottom of our hearts.
Quite literally too! The basis for creating the internet was to share scientific information, something that's getting more and more intruded on by the interests of governments in the name of intellectual property!
Codys lab needs to see this
atm12 why? From what I've seen He uses glasses when necessary?
There has been many time he should of worn protection. The general rule of thumb is that if he wears protective gear its usually pretty dangerous.
Cody uses AvE approved safety squints.
@@MrTridac highest rated
Remember when he hurt his thumb, kinda shows he should be a bit more careful, although he is safer than colin furze
From chemistry, to firearms, to industrial work, safety first and safety always.
The same people that say "safety equipment is for pussies" are usually the same ones that are partially deaf and/or blind in one eye
I go to a technical school and took a welding class for about a week during rotations, almost every lab there stresses the importance of safety goggles but this teacher took it super seriously. At the start of the rotation, he was talking about lab safety, going over stuff like leather boots and heavy pants, he asked the class how metal fragments are removed from an eye? People would guess stuff like "they're pulled out with tweezers" or "the eye has to be removed" The teacher said, "The fragments have to be removed with a drill, during this operation you can't be anesthetized since the eye has to be held in place and the eye rolls around if you're unconscious." He also told the story of a student from multiple years ago who got some metal in his eye, the student didn't tell anyone and for about week had metal in his eye, slowly his vision in that eye got darker and more blurry. He ended up going to the teacher and admitted what happened. He went to the hospital and got it removed, his vision never fully healed in that eye.
As both a former decades-long mechanic and motorcyclist, eyepro is a woefully under-respected part of safety gear...
I've personally exp'd a shard of steel the size of my fingernail embedding in safety glasses while grinding on a part... and of course, helmet visors catching rocks, bees, and steel tyre carcass bits, hours from medical attention.
Kids are 'invulnerable' because they haven't exp'd their bodies failing them... yet. :D As Martin says... only one chance to eyepro.
Yep, riders without eye protection are idiots.
I’m impressed that this video even exists on your channel. Thanks for sharing!
So many great educators on CZcams! I wish there was away to organize these videos to make it easier for teachers and parents to link them to the subject they are currently working on. It’ll also give students with less access to education more options.
Man, for years I didn't bother using safety glasses while working around the house, simply cause I found it too annoying to dig out the dusty, dirty old pair from the toolbox. This changed after adjusting an old chainsaw that I had gotten to run for the first time in 30 odd years. While test cutting, a tiny shard of wood lodged itself just barely in the white of the left eye... Spent ~10 min gently digging it out myself as it was shallow. After that, got myself a set of tinted safety glasses, and now I never leave home without wearing them... Simply cause I still can't be bothered to go digging through that toolbox for those old crappy ones.
So, remember folks, safety first!
Access is important, too. All my important stuff is near my standing desk (where I spend a lot of time). Respirator, weapons, goggles, gloves, hearing protection, etc. Everything else is also in places that make sense (all the survival stuff in one spot, all the tools in another, etc.)-- but the most important stuff is within arms reach.
I wear sunglasses pretty much all the time outside, and they're always rated safety glasses. Cheap, comfortable, easy to replace, and protect my eyes when necessary. Works great for me.
Even though the second test wasn't as dramatic, I imagine the steam (as seen in the slow-mo) would be enough to cause some problems to the unprotected "eyes". Thank you for the excellent demonstration.
plus if you were to jump away you may bump into someone or something containing acid or other things.
Thank you gentlemen! So nice to see a group I respect very much on CZcams promoting safety!
Always pleasure to watch periodic table videos. Big thanks to the great professor.
Nice way to start the week. Thanks professor & the whole team.!!!
This video really makes you wonder "why stop at safety glasses"? I wouldn't want high speed flying glass shrapnel entering my nose or mouth either. Why not wear full face masks?
Legit if I can I wear safety glasses and then a Plexiglas face shield over my whole face over top that
Yeah, if you're working with potentially explosive stuff, you need more than safety glasses.
I mean, if you're working in the lab and an explosion in glassware is a risk, then of course face masks are the bare minimum :>
but if the biggest realistic danger is corrosive liquids splashing in your eyes, you don't need as much physical resistance, and a bit of sodium hydroxide on your cheeks is much more easily cleaned off and doesn't leave permanent damage, as it would in your eye.
Don't stop at the full face mask. Don't even get out of bed in the morning. You could slip and break your skull.
Well, there is the fact that we can repair almost anything in the body that isn't:
The eyes, the brain, the spine. So, yeah, until someone can rebuild an eye and optic nerve from stem cells, best to just protect them.
Elegantly simple, effective demonstration. Bravo! At least twice in my career I have been made thankful for having worn my safety glasses on a particular day. Thank you for spreading the word.
Happy Birthday Professor!!
I really love this kind of demonstration. It's important to really know what the consequences are of your work. I would love to see a better model with a face. Like one of the styrofoam heads you can get for example. And then I'd like to see splash demonstrations as well.
Thank you for doing this😄 until the first accident it seems alotta people don't take safety as seriously
Brilliant demo. Cheers lads.
one of my first experiences in chemistry was playing with a chemistry set at around age 7-8. rubber-Bunging a testtube firmly filled with copper-sulphate solution (one of those _safe_ chemistry sets), and heating it over a alcohol burner... amazing i can still see really.
😲 This will really protect a lot of pupils! 👀
This should be used for OSHA training.
Much love for this channel
These guys even make the boring safety stuff not so boring, and actually pleasant to watch! Yes, safety is for sure a number one prerequisite, but from my experience it was just the teacher droning on and on.
You should show what a drop of acid would do to an eyeball!
HCl, H2SO4, and HNO3
There are bits of glass embedded in the ceiling in the lab at my work from a glass tube that was sealed up to run a reaction. It failed catastrophically as in this video. The engineer running the experiment escaped with his eyesight because he was wearing his safety glasses. We keep thr glass in thr ceiling tiles as a reminder.
So true, So true! Wonderful presentation! ♥
This was a real eye opener. Will never look at safety glasses the same.
Blinding clarity, really.
May I add this to next semesters safety instructions?
Hi sir my self veer , sir I have one request , sir can you make series of chemistry lectures like electro chemistry, chemical kinetics,etc ,because you explain in grate way. Sir, walter lewin sir also make physics lecturing video, sir i am final year bsc student so it make very help. If my English is wrong please sorry sir.
Thank you for making great educational videos!
Great demonstration, on how eye protection is so important.
Required Viewing for anyone working in a lab..
(Please Neil; could you do it again with peeled soft boiled eggs.)
You definitely cannot use those again. Any time any piece of PPE has served its true purpose, i.e. taken the brunt of some sort of accident - it is always to be discarded. Very expensive gear such as safety harnesses or breathing protection has to be re-certified by an authorized tech, who will either restore it or discard it all together.
This especially is true for helmets. If your bike or bicycle helmet, or hard-hat has visible cracks, marring or obvious sun-bleaching - *replace* *it* !
Important video but, to be honest, I came here to see Professor Poliakoff. You're the best, Professor!
Excellent demonstration, love your channel. I wear safety glasses since I work with energetic compounds
1:03 Now, once we have collected our eyeballs, we can see that...
I’ll never complain about wearing my safety glasses again.
Cracking good job on the eye-opening video!
I love your videos. I can learn so much from them JUST SUBSCRIBED!!!
My teachers told us to put them on before you enter the lab and only put them down if we already left it. And you'd better obey that law.
Pretty sure that safety squints are just as effective :)
ENGAGE SAFETY SQUINTS
A very important video, thank you professor!!
Great demo! I love the idea of using tomatoes for a comparison.
Where's the Slow-mo guys when you need them?
Making the 1 video for next year
@@cai6972 They do appear to have disappeared somewhat!
Messing with shaped charges last time I looked, wearing a steel bunker, not just safety specs.
Please stop this madness! How much longer shall vegetable cruelty go on!?!??
Dman as long as animals live on earth, plants will be slaughtered daily. It’s unfortunate😭
Until some nutjob performance artists eats those glassy tomatos and ends their suffering
Botanically, tomatoes are fruit....
It's payback for that movie "attack of the killer tomatoes"
Typical meateater always whinging about the welfare of Veg..
Will be showing this to my students. Thank you. I've already demonstrated egg whites with concentrated HNO3
Great video i always look forward to periodic videos uploads thanks
You know, this experiment and what it is trying to represent is somewhat misleading!
This is CHEMICAL lab, it should be performed with *chemical safety goggles* and maybe ink in the tube instead of water, so that it can demonstrate where the liquid particles hit.
Many people think that machine shop safety glasses, as used in the first demo (designed to protect from flying particles) are adequate. Chem labs must require the goggles with the soft face-conforming edges. They are more uncomfortable and fog up, so many students opt for the ones without the seal, which flying liquids can bypass. :/
But I need my regular glasses to see.
IIRC, those of us who wear "regular" prescription glasses wear the safety glasse in front...
@@pandeyoga5414 I've been told that contacts wouldn't help me.
So get the slightly bigger safety glasses that can be worn over your regular glasses.
Regular glasses are pretty good for protection as long as they're big enough.
At my work they provide prescription safety glasses for those who need them.
it's a very impressive demonstration, thank you teacher
Simple et belle démonstration, valable pour tous les pays et de nombreuses activités. Incluant la Chimie, l'électricité, le travail sur tout ce qui peut envoyer des éclats de verre de métal ou tout autre substance solide ou caustique.
Merci mon cher Professeur!
TRIGGER WARNING - This video contains graphic scenes of Vegetable Abuse.
You mean fruit abuse, right?
watcherjohnny did you just call those tomatoes vegetables?
@@jacobp.2024 That is what my old, Italian noona called them, and when it comes to food, noona was ALWAYS right.
Who cares if your permanently blinded, at least you’ll be the coolest person in the room!
'Were' the coolest guy in the room. Now your just that 'blind guy'.
Nice educational video explicitly opened my eyes on eyes safety. Thanks doc.
So glad to see someone else do a safety video, I haven't seen too many people do one.
My favorite professor!
Thanks! I'll share this at work
I have worked in chemistry, physics and biology labs since I was fifteen till nearly sixty. When safety glasses were available, I used them! I have my eyesight.
Only once did a company not provide them. I got a frustule of diatomaceous earth in one eye. It caused a very small and exceedingly painful scratch on the surface of my eye. I did not see for a week or more. After that, I bought my own safety
glasses and used them!
Great video!!! Thank you.
Great demonstration - and thanks for sparing us from the realism of real eyeballs!
Smashing demonstration, chaps.
Brilliant presentation. I'm a joiner who wears eye protection but, not as much as I should. I'm gonna try and wear them all the time.
Prof Poliakoff was in bbc news article on the website today - was cool to read about him and this channel there!
I predict a lot of sharing of this video amongst teachers, and students going to higher education... Heck, this might need to be added to the opening course notes... Great video guys.
Hey Martyn, I had a talk from Ken Woodward OBE at my year in industry placement last week. He lost his sight because he didn’t put his goggles on. He would be a great guest at the uni and he’s a very inspirational speaker
My dear Professor Poliakoff, thank you for this demonstration, I will use this in my safety meetings at work.
This should be required watching in every chemistry/physics lab and mechanics workshop.
Absolutely!
Excellent video. I think I will keep this in mind and show friends in similar fields/disciplines before they start learning in lab environments. It really is quite sobering.
Very instructive. I will show this to my students.
Great video!! I will definitely show this to my chemistry teacher.
I really hope this man gets to enjoy another 20 years of healthy wonderful life. He's a treasure.
Exactly. I hope the English guy with the crazy hair from Nottingham University lives forever!
Best safety video you could think of! Must watch for students.
Great clip. Wish I had had access to tech available now when I taught chem/physics.
Thank you for highlighting the importance of eye protection! We totally agree! 90% of all eye injuries that send people to the emergency department could be prevented by common eye protection.
This video is very good, it really illustrates the need for safety glasses. I'm sure there's been at least one or two students who were all "why do we need safety glasses?" until things were too late.
Reminds me of an urban legend where some children had mixed chemicals in a metal container and it ended up blowing up. One of the children was said to have gotten steel shards in the eye and lost his eyesight forever.