Sunday 28 September 2014
Ethyl Alcohol vs. E. coli
Abstract
The objective: My objective is to determine if the amount of Ethyl Alcohol in soap will affect the amount of E. coli killed/removed when washing hands with the
soap. My hypothesis is that the more Ethyl alcohol used when making soap, the more E. coli will be killed/removed.
Methods/Materials
To achieve my objective, I prepared three soaps, each containing 30ml Castor oil, 10ml 40% NaOH, and 100ml saturated NaCl with a different amount of Ethyl
Alcohol:10ml,30ml,50ml. To test each soap I soaked my hand in E.coli suspencion then washed my hands with one soap. After washing, I blotted my hand on one sheep blood
agar plate (commercially made). I repeated this process with the two other soaps and incubated all plates at 35°C for 24 hours. I used antibacterial soap in between
the process to avoid carry over of bacteria present.
Results
All plates had almost the same amount of E. coli growth. The average growth of E. coli for the 30ml soap was 1 colony, the 50ml soap was 1 colony, and the 10ml
soap was 2 colonies.
Conclusions/Discussion
After several tests and observations I was able to determine that the amount of Ethyl alcohol in each soap did not affect the amount of E. coli killed/removed,
proving my hypothesis incorrect.
This experiment tests whether the amount of Ethyl alcohol in soap affect the amount of E. coli killed/removed when washing hands?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment