So, I've sort of just accepted that my method for controlling the temperature for rxns in the range of 50-90 °C is terrible and frustratingly inconsistent. The problem is that all hot plates in my lab reach 100 °C at the lowest setting, unless a copious amount of oil is heated - and then the oil is not consistently heated throughout.
I've managed to work through this inconvenience by using water baths which seem to require a bit more heating than oil, but the steam is often annoying for reactions which I'd prefer to be dry, approaching all of them. A post-doc I trained under used to heat the flask directly on the hot plate, but that means fine tuning the temperature of the rxn flask during the rxn, instead of before and can vary wildly if the distance between the plate and flask is changed slightly. I've resorted to trying to hit the sweet spot on the dial, before the lowest setting, but still engaging the heating element and have been able to get temps around 60 °C with ~1L of oil.
But clearly this is all tedious, ridiculous and unnecessary right? I suppose I need to just order a new hot plate with a wider range of temperatures? Or maybe I can use a power supply to limit the power to the plate?