How to use an
Oil Immersion Lens
The most powerful lens of the
light microscope is the 100x oil immersion objective.
Immersion oil has been formulated
so that it has a refractive index identical to that of glass. Thus there
is no refraction of light when it passes from glass to oil and vice versa.
Thus, two changes in refractive
index can be eliminated by placing a drop of immersion oil on the specimen, and
immersing the 100x oil immersion objective directly into the drop. You should be
struck by the clarity that results.
Illustrate the
four stage process of using the oil immersion lens:
1) Focus
very carefully with the 40x objective over the stained specimen
on the slide.
(Once focused, do not alter focus for the next three steps!)
2) Rotate
turret half way so
that the 40x and 100x objectives straddle specimen.
3) Apply
a small drop of oil directly on the slide over the specimen.
4) Rotate
100x objective into the immersion oil .
Three important rules
attend the use of this lens:
1. Never use an oil
immersion lens without the oil.
2. Never get oil on any
other lens.
3. Clean up all oil
when finished.
PROTOCOL:
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1. Focus at low
power on a region of a smeared and stained specimen which is
well-spread and stained (not too thin, nor too thick).
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2. Rotate turret
to 40x objective, locate desired portion of specimen in the
center of the field. Refocus very carefully so that the specimen is
focused as sharply as possible. (Do not alter focus for the
following steps )
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3. CRITICAL STEP:
Partially rotate turret so
that 40x and 100x objectives straddle the specimen.
Place a small drop of oil on the slide in the center of the lighted area.
(Take care not to dribble on the stage.)
Note the small drop of oil
directly over the area of the specimen to be examined.
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4. Rotate turret so that the 100x oil immersion objective
touches the oil and clicks into place.
Focus only
with fine focus. Hopefully, the specimen will come into focus easily. Do
not change focus dramatically. If you still have trouble, move the slide
slightly left and right, looking for movement in the visual field, and
focus on the object which moved. |
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5. With more than one
specimen on a slide, do not alter focusing, rather, place a drop
of oil on the second specimen, and slide the slide laterally until it is
in place.
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6. Never go back
to the 10x or 40x objectives after you have applied oil to the
specimen since oil can ruin the lower power objectives. [The 4x
objective can be used because it is high enough to be above the oil.]
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7. Clean up!: When
you have finished wipe the 100x oil immersion objective carefully with
lens paper to remove all oil. Wipe oil from the slide. Clean the
stage should any oil have spilled on it. Recap the immersion oil
container securely, replace in drawer.
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