Faculty of Applied Engineering and Urban Planning: Lecture 1: Lab Reports
Faculty of Applied Engineering and Urban Planning: Lecture 1: Lab Reports
Urban Planning
English I
(Technical Writing)
2016
Definition
A laboratory report provides a formal
record of an experiment. The discussion of
objectives, procedures, and results should
be specific enough that interested readers
could replicate the experiment.
Lab experiment
Lab Reports
Lab reports are the most frequent kind of
document written in engineering
Lab tests
Research Field Investigation
Format
1. Title Page
2. Abstract
3. Methods and Materials
4. Procedure
This format has evolved to answer
5. Results the general questions:
6. Discussion What did you do?
7. Conclusion Why did you do it?
8. References How did you do it?
9. Appendices What happened?
1. Title Page
Needs to contain:
◦ The name of the experiment
◦ The names of lab partners
◦ Date.
For Example:
Not “Lab No. 4”
but “Lab No. 4: The speed of sound”.
2. Abstract
The Abstract: summarizes four essential aspects of the
report:
1. the purpose of the experiment (sometimes expressed as
the purpose of the report)
2. key findings,
3. significance and
4. major conclusions.
Example:
Since none of the samples reacted to the Silver foil test,
sulfide, if present at all, does not exceed a
concentration of approximately 0.025 g/l. It is therefore
unlikely that the water main pipe break was the result
of sulfide-induced corrosion.
Discussion: Interpretation
What is the significance of the results? What ambiguities
exist? What questions might we raise? Find logical
explanations for problems in the data:
Example:
Although the water samples were received on 14
August 2000, testing could not be started until 10
September 2000. It is normally desirably to test as
quickly as possible after sampling in order to
avoid potential sample contamination. The effect
of the delay is unknown.
Discussion
More particularly, focus your discussion with strategies
like these:
Compare expected results with those obtained.
Analyse experimental error
Explain your results in terms of theoretical issues
Relate results to your experimental objective(s)
Compare your results to similar investigations
Analyze the strengths and limitations of your
experimental design
Conclusion
Can be very short in most undergraduate laboratories.
Simply state what you know now for sure, as a result of
the lab.