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MagFuge® First-of-its-Kind High-speed Centrifuge and Magnetic Stirrer in One Unit

 A researcher once said to me, "Does the world really need another centrifuge?"  With the countless brands flooding the pages of catalogs and websites it was hard to argue his point.   

Until now!  Heathrow Scientific has developed a dual purpose centrifuge/magnetic stirrer called the MagFuge.  The MagFuge's patented dual design provides magnetic stirring and high speed centrifugation in one powerful unit.  This is truly an innovative design that provides substantial cost and benchtop space savings by having two pieces of equipment in one.

Please review the Magfuge's feature and specifications below to see just how innovative it is.

The MagFuge® by Heathrow Scientific is the industry’s first high-speed centrifuge and magnetic stirrer, combined into one unit. This design innovation enables a substantial cost savings for labs by not having to purchase two pieces of equipment, a stirrer and a centrifuge, because the MagFuge® does it all.

Features:

  • Made from a durable chemically resistant ABS and polycarbonate making it easy to clean, maintenance free and helps lower the cost of ownership
  • The modern low-profile design is compact and has a small footprint for labs with limited bench space and limited height that ultimately helps reduced clutter in the lab
  • An easy to use back-lit digital control panel for time, speed and operations ensures effective outcomes and streamlines the work flow process by allowing for quick set up
  • US Design Patent No. D814,045 and Utility Patent Pending
  • Community Design No. 003515337-0001-0002 European Patent App. 3 246 088

 

High-Speed Mini Centrifuge

The high-speed Centrifuge (12,500 RPM) is designed to give you maximum speed and flexibility while being comfortable and easy to use.

  • Ideal for most protocols requiring fast spins (12,500rpm / 9,800 x g), and appropriate for PCR, microfilter cell separation, and HPLC protocols
  • Adjustable time (30 seconds to 60 minutes) and speed (500 to 12,500 RPM)
  • Variable speed can be set in RPM or RCF and has rapid acceleration and fast controlled breaking
  • Two rotors included, 12 place for 1.5/2.0 mL tubes and 6 place for 5 mL tubes with adapters for additional tube sizes
  • Manual lid override allows users to open lid in case of a power failure and prevents loss of samples
  • Safety features help ensure it will not operate when the lid is open, a rotor is jammed, or the unit is out of balance

 

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Magnetic Stirrer

The high-performance Magnetic Stirrer (3L Plus) is designed to provide a powerful magnetic coupling that ensures consistent accurate alignment of the stir bar that significantly reduce the chance of spin-outs.

  • Ideal for work with sensitive samples such as cell lines and protocols requiring more aggressive mixing to quickly achieve full dilution of samples in solution
  • Multiple stirring modes, clockwise, c. clockwise and oscillate enable protocols to be controlled precisely for reproducible results
  • Adjustable time (30 seconds to 60 minutes or continuous) and speed (50 to 2,500 RPM)
  • After hours of continuous use, the unit remains cool ensuring sample integrity
  • Sensor technology prevents the stirrer rotor from being used above 2,500 RPM helping to protect users and prevent unit damage
  • Two silicone mats are included to help prevent spills and to help keep vessels stable
  • High-quality rare-earth magnets are used in the stirrer rotor to ensure the strongest magnetic coupling
  • Two rare-earth stir bars (40 x 12 mm) included have PTFE coating for chemical resistance

 

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Precision, literally at the touch of one button!

The MagFuge® offers an easy to program digital display.

Multiple functions and options are available to achieve the best possible centrifugation and stirring results for a wide range of protocols.

 

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Conveniently rotate the knob to choose the function desired (centrifuge or stirrer) and push to lock in the selection

After selecting a function, rotate through the performance options and select the program to meet your requirements.

  • Speed Display or Stirrer Mode
  • Speed: Centrifuge 500 to 12,500 RPM Stirrer 50 to 2,500 RPM, 5 sec. increments
  • Time: 30 seconds to 60 minutes, 5 sec. increments (continuous option for stirrer)

 

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Last run memory feature is avaliable for repeat protocol requirements.

 

Technical specifications:

Model Number120582
PowerUniversal 12V DC input 4 cord sets: Low voltage, double insulated power adapter
Weight 1.85 kg (4.08 lb)
CertificationsCE, SGS, RoHS2, WEEE
Operating TempRange 2°C to 40°C
Max Relative Humidity Non-condensing, 80% for temperatures up to 31°C decreasing linearly to 50% R.H. at 40°C
Warranty3 Years
Dimensions (L x W x H)9.2 x 7.3 x 4.7 in (23.5 x 18.5 x12 cm)
ColorGray/Blue
MagFuge® Centrifuge 
Speed Range500 – 999 rpm (increments of 1); 1,000 – 5,000 rpm (increments of 5); 5,000 – 12,500 rpm (increments of 25)
RCF16 – 9,783 x g (max RCF calculated)
Capacity12 place 1.5/2.0 mL tube rotor: 24 mL total maximum liquid volume
6 place 5 mL tube rotor: 30 mL total maximum liquid volume
Run Time Ranges30 seconds – 60 minutes (5 second increments)
MagFuge® Magnetic Stirrer 
Speed Range50 – 999 rpm (increments of 1); 1,000 – 2,500 rpm (increments of 5)
Capacity3L total maximum vessel liquid volume. Diameter of vessel not to exceed 130 mm (6.70”)
Run Time Ranges30 seconds to 60 minutes or continuous (5 second increments)
Oscillating Period1 second – 60 minutes or continuous
Stir Bar Dimensions40 x 12 mm cylindrical shape, rare-earth 
Plate DimensionsApprox 130 mm diameter

 

Package Includes:

  • MagFuge®
  • Three Rotors: 5 mL Tube Rotor, 1.5/2.0 mL Tube Rotor, Stirrer Rotor
  • 12 Tube adapters 0.2 mL
  • 12 Tube adapters for 0.5 mL
  • 2 Silcone mats for stirrer lid
  • 2 Rare-Earth PTFE coated stir bars stir bars
  • 1 Low voltage, double insulated power adapter with 4 cord sets

 

Purchase a Magfuge!

 

 

A guide to microbead milling.

What is microbead milling? Microbead milling is a homogenization process used to break up (lyse) samples in order to release the DNA, RNA and proteins contained within the cells. Samples are placed in tubes with the appropriate grinding beads and subjected to high energy mixing. The beads impact the sample, eventually breaking it down on the cellular level releasing subcellular contents. The samples are then typically centrifuged and the lysate recovered from above the beads.

 
The Benchmark   BeadBug™ 6 and BeadBlaster™ 24 are bead beating homogenizers, designed to rapidly homogenize small samples in disposable tubes with the aid of grinding beads. Both instruments work by physically moving tubes, samples, and grinding beads in an oscillating motion several thousand times per minute. Through this motion, the beads tear into and crush samples on impact. They are different in capacity - if only a few samples require processing a day, then the BeadBug will be sufficient for most researchers. For those with higher capacity demands or a larger lab group, the BeadBlaster 24 is more practical. 
 
Microbead homogenizing can be effective at disrupting many different sample types. The key aspect of successfully homogenizing samples is to match the correct bead to the sample and then not to overload the disruption tube. For bead beating to be effective, the beads need to move and crash into the sample. Tubes packed with solid tissues and/or filled with buffer prevent the beads from moving freely. 
 
General guidelines that can help to ensure that samples are homogenized effectively include: 
 
•Do not over fill tubes. The total volume of the sample, beads, and buffer should never exceed half the volume of the tube. Less is better. 
•Sample and buffer should be twice the volume of the beads. 
•Detergents should be kept to a minimum as the foaming will impede the movement of the beads. 
•Solid tissues should never be more than 1/20th the volume of the disruption tube, i.e., no more than 100 mg tissue in a 2 ml tube. 
•If sample warming is an issue, process the sample in short bursts. 
 
A variety of prefilled tubes are available for homogenizing samples including those with glass and Triple-Pure™ zirconium beads. Both bead types are acid washed and processed to remove nucleases and proteases. The Triple-Pure bead tubes undergo special handling during filling and are quality tested to ensure the elimination of DNase, RNase, protease, and nucleic acids. When samples are used for molecular biology applications, the high purity of the Triple-Pure beads is preferred.
 
Both glass (silica) and zirconium beads are effective at disrupting cells and tissues. The added density of zirconium helps to yield better homogenized samples. Benchmark has nine varieties of prefilled tubes, each which can be used with a general category of sample. These tubes are: 
 
Standard Glass Beads, 0.1 mm – Effective for the homogenization of bacteria. Best used for cultured microbes where low cell densities are not an issue. 
 
Standard Glass Beads, 0.5 mm – For larger microbial cells, like yeast. Effective for homogenizing yeast cultures, especially where heat labile proteins might be involved. 
 
Standard Glass Beads 1.0 mm – For small pieces of soft tissue, fungal mycelium, and larger algal cells. 
 
Triple-Pure Zirconium Beads, 0.1 mm – For all bacteria and low density cultures. 
 
Triple-Pure Zirconium Beads, 0.5 mm –Effective for the homogenization of yeast and smaller algae cells. Effective for low density cultures and samples where contamination is an issue. 
 
Triple-Pure Zirconium Beads, 1.0 mm – Use for fungal mycelium, soft tissues, very small tissue samples. 
 
Triple-Pure Zirconium Beads, 1.5 mm – Effective for homogenizing softer animal tissues (adipose, mouse intestine, hypothalamus, and liver) as well as leaf and soft vegetables (e.g., potato). 
 
Triple-Pure Zirconium Beads, 3.0 mm – Provides greater energy for shearing and rupturing tough samples such as muscle, lung, and kidney as well as small plant seeds, stems, and roots.
 
Stainless Steel Beads, 2.8 mm – Stainless steel has greater density than both glass and zirconium and can be used on very tough samples such as cornea and connective tissue and in situations where the other tube types are not effective. Metals beads are effective at homogenizing tough samples, but they also generate significant heat. Care should be taken when working with heat labile molecules. Plant extracts will often oxide rapidly in the presence of stainless steel.
 
Sample Types:
 
Bacteria – As bacteria tend to be very small, 1-3 µm in length or diameter, smaller beads normally work better for cell disruption. A culture of bacteria contains upwards of 109 cells/ml thus smaller beads (e.g., 0.1 mm) allow for greater surface area for impacting cells. This is a very significant factor in cracking bacteria. Generally the mass of the beads greatly exceeds the mass of the bacteria, thus both glass and zirconium work well. However, glass beads tend to clump more than denser zirconium beads which settle more effectively in lysates after processing. Other organisms of comparable size, such as cyanobacteria, can also be processed in a similar manner. 
 
Yeast – The next larger microorganism after bacteria is yeast, being roughly 10+ microns in diameter or length. Beads with a diameter of 0.5 mm tend to work very well on yeast cells. Many single cell algae can be processed as if they are yeast. 
 
Filamentous Fungi – Fungi that are not solid bodies, such as pycnidia and similar fruiting bodies, are effectively disrupted with the next size of beads. Beads of 1.0 mm are very effective for shearing mycelium.
 
Plant Leaves – Leaves can be homogenized readily using 1.5 and 3.0 mm zirconium beads and 2.8 mm stainless steel beads. Leaves are often harvested by cutting out the sample with a paper hole punch. A sample of this size is normally 10-20 mg in mass, thus multiple punches can be processed in one tube. 
 
Shoots and Stalks – More resilient plant material can be effectively homogenized using the larger bead sizes. Stalks of bundled grasses and young roots and shoots can be effectively homogenized using these beads, however plants which are more mature may have significant pulp following homogenization if their lignocelluloses content is high. Sample size should not exceed 50-70 mg to ensure good disruption. 
 
Seeds – Small fresh seeds can be processed effectively using 3.0 mm zirconium and 2.8 mm stainless steel beads. Larger seeds must first be dissected so that the sample mass is no more the 50 mg. 
 
Soft Animal Tissue – Animal tissues can be grouped into soft and hard tissue types. The softer tissues, such as liver, adipose, and hypothalamus, can readily be disrupted using 1.5 mm beads or larger. Though easily homogenized, it is still important not to overload tubes with soft animal tissues. 
 
Resilient Animal Tissues – Fibrous animal tissues such as muscle, lung, kidney and heart can be difficult to homogenize. By using larger beads, these tissues can be effectively disrupted to liberate RNA, DNA and proteins with very high yields. Triple-Pure 3.0 mm zirconium beads and stainless steel beads (2.8 mm) are effective for disrupting these tough tissues. Sample size is best kept under 50 mg while buffer should be no more than 200-300 µl. Many RNA extraction protocols use larger volumes of buffer, and for these processes the sample can be homogenized in less extraction buffer and then brought up to volume following homogenization.
 
 
bead kit
 

Autofil Polypropylene Bottle Top Filters

Autofil® PP bottle-top filters for solvent filtration are a revolutionary new way to purify solvents for analytical applications to obtain sterilized or purified extracts. 

The primary function of solvent-compatible bottle-top filters in the general lab space is pre-filtration of solvents used in HPLC (High Performance Liquid Chromatography).  HPLC is an analytical technique used to separate, quantify, and identify the components of a mixture.  HPLC is used in countless industries, but is most notable in pharmaceutical, biochemical, biological, medical, and research areas.  Common uses include drug testing, medical testing, drug purity testing in production, analysis of components of biological or chemical samples.

All HPLC processing relies upon a “mobile phase” composed of solvent—this mobile phase is mixed with the sample being analyzed, and used to deliver it through the HPLC machine, allowing it to be separated into parts and analyzed.  This solvent, or mobile phase, must be completely free of contaminants or particulates.  Particulate matter can damage the inner workings of HPLC machines, requiring very costly repairs, and potentially throwing off analytical accuracy.  Biological contaminants in the mobile phase lead to risk of growth inside the solvent intake lines, which can lead to similar (again, costly) issues.

To avoid these harmful situations, many labs will pre-filter their HPLC solvents.  This generally involves the use of side-arm Erlenmeyer vacuum flasks, rubber stoppers, glass Buchner funnels, die-cut membranes, and other expensive, breakable, movable parts.  Any glassware will require cleaning, and risks shattering.  The filtration requires supervision due to the risk of tipping over, and also requires pouring the solvent into another vessel as a final step, since the Erlenmeyer flask is hardly a good storage vessel for volatile solvents.  The alternative to this pre-filtration is to buy HPLC-grade solvents, which can be expensive. 

Another use for the Autofil® PP bottle-top filters is Cannabis extraction.  Cannabis extraction is a process that utilizes a solvent to extract THC, CBD, and other cannabinoids, as well as terpenes, from cannabis plant matter.  THC is the primary psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, while CBD provides various health effects, and terpenes provide flavor and other health benefits.  The three major solvent types used in cannabinoid extraction are CO2, hydrocarbon (butane or propane), and ethanol.  

Ethanol is the cheapest and simplest extraction method, but requires more “cleanup” of the extract to achieve a pure product.  Hydrocarbons are often faster, and produce a purer product, but require more expensive equipment.  They also present issues of risk related to the use of flammable solvent, and of incomplete removal of these harmful solvents from the final product.  CO2 is generally the most expensive and highest-quality process, yielding a product that is guaranteed free of solvent.  CO2 extraction requires very high-cost assemblies, and is generally only used in higher-end labs.

In all three extraction methods, the initial extraction step produces a crude product, generally contaminated with waxes, oils, lipids, and pigments.  Each solvent leads to varying incidences of these impurities—ethanol yields more pigments, hydrocarbons yield mostly waxes, etc.  All three methods require a step referred to as winterization.  In the case of non-ethanol extractions, the product will usually be re-dissolved in ethanol, so ethanol is the standard here.  In short, winterization involves chilling the sample to sub-zero temperature, waiting for oils and lipids to precipitate out of solution, and then quickly filtering the ethanol to strain out these oils and lipids.  From here, the sample is either stripped of solvent via rotary evaporation (creating a final product), or put through the process of pigment removal.

Pigment removal is intended mostly for ethanol extractions, but may apply to others.  Pigments like chlorophyll lower purity of product and alter color.  For these reasons, they are often removed by the addition of activated carbon.  The carbon absorbs the pigments, and can then be filtered out of the mixture, yielding a purer extract to be treated by rotary evaporation as above.  Again, this step requires filtration.

In either case, filtration is generally very crude.  End users often use simple setups with coffee filters and the like—more refined setups use side-arm Erlenmeyer flasks and Buchner Funnels. These filtration's involve costly parts, require supervision, run slowly and inefficiently, risk breakage of glassware, and are prone to incomplete or ineffective filtration.

Autofill PP filters come in three membrane types.

Membrane Characteristics 

PES:  Exhibits very low protein binding and extractables. Faster than Cellulose Acetate and Nylon membrane.

Nylon:  Naturally hydrophilic and has greater chemical compatibility than other membranes. Extremely low extractables. Best used with solutions containing little or no protein. 

PTFE:  Naturally hydrophobic. Great chemical compatibility, making it exceptional for filtering aggressive solvents.

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Click here for the complete line of Autofil PP products.

 

 

 

 

 

Individually calibrated and certified thermometers and timers.

Temperature and time are two of the most important variables in any experiment.  The accuracy and reproducibility of these variables is critical in the validation of your results.  This is why we offer Traceable® timers and thermometers manufactured by the Control Company.  

What is Traceable® and who requires a calibrated and certified product.  Traceability is the property of a measurement result in which the result can be related to a national measurement reference through a documented unbroken chain of calibrations. National measurement standards are maintained by national measurement institutions (NMIs) such as the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in the United States.  Using products that are documented to meet these measurement standards is a requirement of Government labs, labs maintaining certification programs, military suppliers and any company wanting to maintain ISO-certification. 

Each Traceable® thermometer and timer is individually serialized, calibrated and certified. An individually serialized Traceable® Calibration Certificate provides assurance that an independent auditor has checked the methods, procedures, testing, technique, and record-keeping practices of the calibration testing laboratory. The American Association for Laboratory Accreditation (A2LA) is widely recognized internationally through its participation in the International Laboratory Accreditation Cooperation Mutual Recognition Agreement (ILAC MRA). There is no need to have the units calibrated locally before use as all European governing bodies fully accept and recognize the Traceable® certificate of calibration.

The Traceable® Certificate provided with each thermometer and timer is traceable to standards provided by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), a U.S. Government agency within the Commerce Department. The Traceable® Certificate complies with ANSI/NCSL Z540-1.

A Traceable® Certificate includes all of the information to meet today’s stringent accreditation demands, CLIA requirements, government specifications, and ISO 9000 certifications.

View sample Traceable® Certificate

View ISOGuide34 Certificate

The Traceable® line of thermometers and timers are invaluable in assuring that your lab results are accurate and meet the requirements set by regulatory agencies.

 

 

Traceable® is a registered trademark of Control Company.