Laboratory Manual Principles, Procedures and Reporting
Laboratory Manual Principles, Procedures and Reporting
Table of Contents
1 Introduction............................................................................................................................... 1
2 Laboratory Procedure and Control........................................................................................... 3
1 Introduction
This lab manual is common to all programs within Mechical Engineering Technology at
Metropolitan State College of Denver. Students are encouraged to learn to do all experiments
following the same general methods and procedures presented in this manual, and to document
them in lab reports using similar styles and format. This will help perfect laboratory and reporting
skills useful for students to professionally integrate into industrial or research laboratory
establishments. An example being the learning of LabView to create virtual instruments for data
acquisition.
The exercises in this manual are designed to give engineering technology students an
introduction to laboratory procedures for performing experiments in fluid mechanics,
thermodynamics, heat transfer, strength of materials and other mechanical engineering subjects.
The purpose is to provide students with a deeper understanding of theoretical principles by
observing phenomena, by measuring physical characteristics and by comparing measured versus
calculated results. This “hands-on” experience is essential to an engineering technology student.
Each assigned lab experiment (individually separated by dividers in this ring binder) is
prefaced by briefly presenting the theory and the physical principles that will be demonstrated
experimentally. Although material relevant to the lab is discussed in class, the lab manual will
sometimes provide supplemental material that could not be covered in class because of time
constraints. Thus by reading the lab manual and by performing the lab exercises, the student will
gain a much greater knowledge of basic principles than could be obtained by attending lectures,
reading the textbook, and working homework problems only.
These exercises are also intended to teach students the principles of laboratory protocol
and reporting. In addition to following the procedures given for a lab, each student will be
required to submit a lab report documenting the experiment and the results. Documenting
laboratory results in a clear and concise manner is just as important as conducting an experiment
properly. The laboratory discipline and the reporting principles presented herein will extend
directly to any engineering test lab in industry. The suggested format for the lab report is provided
in Section 4 of this manual. Students are expected to submit neat, professional reports, free of
grammar and spelling errors.
Usually experiments have been performed and validated by the MET department during
the preparation of this manual. Such experiments are often documented by detailed test plan-like
procedures. When these are followed, the students can expect to complete the lab within the
allotted time, and obtain the expected results. In such cases, deviations form the procedures will
not be permitted. Other times relatively new experiments are introduced which have not been
matured by numerous student trials here at Metro. For these, only the goals of the experiment
are documented along with a description of the apparatus to be used, and the student teams are
expected to improvise test procedures appropriate to achieving the stated goals. These two
possibilities will be clear from the experiment writeups themselves.
At the completion of each experiment, the team shall account for all equipment and
instrumentation that was used during the procedure (“sponge count”). Equipment taken from
storage racks or cabinets shall be returned to designated storage locations. The area where the
lab was conducted shall be cleaned, and returned to the condition found when entering the lab to
begin the procedure.
In the event that there is insufficient time at the end of a lab period to accomplish the
above clean-up and equipment return, the TC shall delegate this responsibility to one or more
team members as a follow up activity to be accomplished within 2 days.
3 Laboratory Safety
All safety requirements as specified in this section will be strictly enforced.
During Detailed Operations, team members have responsibility for assuring that they are
equipped with adequate hearing and eye protection if so specified in the procedure.
3.4 Clothing
In most cases, typical attire worn to class is acceptable in the lab. However, bare feet,
high-heel fashion shoes (e.g., spike heels), open-toe shoes and sandals are not permitted.
When working around reciprocating equipment or rotating machinery, avoid loose fitting
clothing and jewelry (especially chains or necklaces) that could get caught in moving or rotating
mechanisms. Very serious injuries can result. Precautions should be taken with long-sleeve
shirts, and neckties (although seldom worn by students these days!) should be removed.
All electrical connections, including cords and plugs, shall be inspected for damage,
corrosion, or foreign materials that could present a safety hazard, prior to mating.
4 Lab Reports
Each student will be responsible for preparing a report after completing each laboratory
exercise. The required content and format of the report are given in the following sections.
If no formal test procedure was included in the provided experiment documentation then
an outline of the test procedure which was actually followed should be submitted in the lab report.
• Narrative
• Tabular
• Graphical
• Digital photographs and/or digital video
• A combination of the above.
This section should present the reduced data, not the raw experimental data. For example, if the
objective of the experiment is to determine the viscosity of a fluid as a function of temperature,
then that is the data presented. In this case, a graph showing viscosity versus temperature is the
recommended format for presenting the experimental results. The determination of viscosity may
have required a number of measurements (raw data), which were used to calculate the viscosity
at different temperatures (reduced data). Recommended formats for tables and graphs are
provided in section 4.3 of this manual.
This section should also include a brief description of how the reduced data was
obtained. Identify formulas, charts, tables, or handbooks that were used to obtain the final
results. Refer the reader to the appendix for sample calculations illustrating the use of formulas,
charts or handbook data in obtaining the results.
4.1.5 Conclusions
This section summarizes your conclusion regarding the results. If the results differ from
those expected, provide an explanation based on an analysis of the data. Examine any
assumptions that were used that could be adversely affecting the results. Consider experimental
error as a cause of the differences. The conclusions should be based on (1) the experimental
results, and (2) supporting technical rationale and analysis.
1. Objectives
2. Test Method
3. Test Procedure
4. Test Results
5. Conclusions
6. Appendixes
• Tables split between pages without repeating table headers. You should make sure
tables are contained on one page; otherwise, configure the table to place a complete
header on each section of the table.
• Plots without: titles, specific data legions, or axis labels without units or improper
units.
• Equations not centered by themselves on a page line, without equation numbers and
without identifying all terms used in the equation along with their units.
• Pages without identification or page numbers. Use headers or footers to identify
each page along with page # of #.
5 Lab Exercises