Histology is all about chemical reactions. Those must be done reliably and precisely for high quality analysis of tissue content and quality. The reactions are, inherently, only as good as the reagents being used. The following are recipes for the reagents that get used routinely in our histological analyses.
Paraformaldehyde (chemical name is polyoxymethylene) is a powder of polymerized formaldehyde that by itself cannot fix tissues. To be usable as a tissue fixative, paraformaldehyde has to be dissolved in hot water to become a formaldehyde solution. Formalin is a saturated formaldehyde solution in water (37% by weight, 40% by volume) containing 10-15% methanol. Methanol is added to slow down the polymerization to formaldehyde, which reduces the fixing power of formalin. Formalin can also be made in an alcohol-free form from powdered paraformaldehyde.