Difference between revisions of "Centrifugal evaporator"

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[[Category:Laboratory equipment]]
[[Category:Laboratory equipment]]

Revision as of 20:10, 4 August 2014

File:EvaporatorCutaway.jpg
Cutaway image of HT-4X Centrifugal Evaporator

A centrifugal evaporator is a device used in chemical and biochemical laboratories for the efficient and gentle evaporation of solvents from many samples at the same time, and samples contained in microtitre plates. If only one sample required evaporation then a rotary evaporator is most often used. The most advanced modern centrifugal evaporators not only concentrate many samples at the same time, they eliminate solvent bumping and can handle solvents with boiling points of up to 220 °C. This is more than adequate for the modern high throughput laboratory.

Design

A centrifugal evaporator often comprises a vacuum pump connected to a centrifuge chamber in which the samples are placed. Many systems also have a cold trap or solvent condenser placed in line between the vacuum pump and the centrifuge chamber to collect the evaporated solvents. The most efficient systems also have a cold trap on the pump exhaust. There are many further developments available from manufacturers to speed up the process, and to provide protection for delicate samples.

The system works by lowering the pressure in the centrifuge system - as the pressure drops so does the boiling point of the solvent(s) in the system. When the pressure is sufficiently low that the boiling points of the solvents are below the temperature of the sample holder, then they will boil. This enables solvent to be rapidly removed while the samples themselves are not heated to damaging temperatures. High performance systems can remove very high boiling solvents such as Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) or N-Methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP) while keeping sample temperatures below 40 oC at all times.

The centrifugal force generated by spinning the centrifuge rotor creates a pressure gradient within the solvent contained in the tubes or vials, this means that the samples boil from the top down, helping to prevent "bumping". The most advanced systems apply the vacuum slowly and run the rotor at speeds of 500 x gravity - this system is proven to prevent bumping and was patented by Genevac in the late 1990s.[1]

Manufacturers

Centrifugal evaporators were invented in the 1960s by Savant, Inc., leading with their popular SpeedVac brand.[2] Other well-known manufacturers of centrifugal evaporators include German company Martin Christ, Labconco Corp. of the U.S., and Genevac of the U.K.

Notes

The bulk of this article is reused from the Wikipedia article.

References

  1. "Dri-Pure: Sample Integrity Protection System" (PDF). Genevac Ltd. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110720191509/http://www.pld.fi/supp/Sampleprep/Genevac%20files/DRI.PDF. Retrieved 01 August 2014. 
  2. "SAVANT/EC: General Information". Savant Instruments, Inc. 1995. Archived from the original on 14 November 1996. https://web.archive.org/web/19961114125008/http://savec.com/about.htm. Retrieved 01 August 2014.