How to Write Lab Reports

Report Sections

A complete report, like a journal article, contains the following items [NOTE]Journal articles also place an Introduction section ahead of the Results & Discussion. Please do not insert an Introduction into your lab reports.:

  • Title
  • Abstract
  • Results & Discussion
  • Experimental
  • References
  • E-factor
  • Supporting documents (usually spectra)

This list follows the same pattern used to write articles for organic chemistry research journals. We encourage you to look at some articles in the Journal of Organic Chemistry to learn how organic chemists communicate and structure their research reports.

Instructions for each report section, with the exception of the Experimental section, are provided below. Our instructions are a simplified version of the guidelines that the American Chemical Society publishes online for authors and reviewers. The ACS makes a large number of authoring resources available. If you would like to look at the documents that are most relevant to this course, focus on The ACS Style Guide and Ethical Guidelines.

Title

Abstract

Results and Discussion

Experimental

References

E-factor

Supporting documents