Possible uses of Dioxan in Botanical Microtechnic

Abstract
Dioxan has been well established as an advantageous dehydrating agent for plant tissues. It dehydrates equally well after fixatives containing formalin, acetic acid, chromic acid, chromates, mercuric chloride, osmic acid, and alcohol. Better infiltration of paraffin after dehydration may be obtained by passing the material thru (1) a cold bath composed of 30 cc. of dioxan, 5 cc. of xylol and 20 cc. of melted soft paraffin and, (2) a warm bath of 50 cc. of dioxan, 50 cc. of paraffin, and 10 cc. of xylol. Transfer from (2) to soft paraffin. A dioxan fixative consisting of dioxan 50 cc., formalin 6 cc., acetic acid 5 cc., water 50 cc. was devised for delicate subjects. The fixed material is transferred directly into dioxan and mounted in dioxan-diaphane or dioxan-balsam. Very delicate objects require dioxan dilution of the balsam and slow concentration of the mounting medium by evaporation. Entire plant parts or epidermal peelings are fixed in any desired fixative, washed if necessary, transferred to dioxan and mounted in diluted dioxan-balsam or diaphane. Dioxan may be used to mount hyalin objects whose refractive indexes approach those of balsam in media of higher index than balsam. It may be used in place of alcohol in finishing parafin sections, and since it exhibits different stain solubilities than alcohol it offers an important new tool in obtaining and maintaining stain balances.

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