Welcome to Make Your Lab
Jul 17, 2024 / By System Admin / in Lab Products
In bioscience labs, we often have to work with sensitive cultures and other things that are very sensitive to things floating in the air. A small volume of air (just the amount we inhale) can have millions of floating particles and microbes in it ‒ you don’t want that in your precious culture. So, in order to keep your work safe from these airborne contaminants, you have to work only in a sterile, filtered air environment. Thus comes the enclosed work surface with the filtered air flow.
This airflow has to be laminar in nature, because normally air flows in a very irregular nature. Normal ‒ that is, turbulent air flow creates lots of eddies and vortices that wreak havoc on any sterile-air environment. They can gather and deposit particles from outside air on your beloved hard-worked culture and screw up your whole result. Thus, we drown the work area in air that moves as one body, in uniform velocity and direction, so that eddies and vortices don’t form. That is exactly what laminar airflow is.
Key takeaway: A Laminar Air Flow prevents samples and cultures from getting contaminated by providing a clean-air work environment. |
The basic idea of a laminar airflow cabinet is to provide a safe, sterile, filtered air environment. To that end, it uses the following parts:
These parts come together to make a laminar airflow cabinet. Using the blower or fan, the device sucks in room air from the front or top of the device. The air first passes through the prefilter or filter pad, which captures large dust particles from the air. Then it goes through the HEPA filter, which filters out all the fine particles and microbes. That filtered air then pours into the enclosure and washes over the work surface, clearing it of any suspended particles and microbes. You can use the UV lamp to further sterilize the work area by bathing it in deadly rays.
The air flow is kept laminar by way of constructing the device carefully, so that all parts of the air inside the enclosure flows in straight lines parallel to each other, in the same direction. The airflow can be horizontal or vertical in manner, depending upon what should be the purpose of the sterile hood ‒ to keep the sample safe or to keep the user safe.
A vertical laminar airflow cabinet provided by Labkafe
This is basically a box which provides the voluminous area to act as a sterile environment. It is generally a stainless steel cuboid box, with a glass shutter in front. The enclosure protects the sterile environment created inside the cabinet by insulating it and separating it from the outside environment.
The material of the box is often stainless steel, because it is very resistant to biological contamination and is easy to clean, without requiring any special coating or such. The glass (or fiberglass) shutter in front of the box opens full or half by means of hinges or sliders, and so lets the user access the work surface.
Also made of stainless steel, this is the flat table for you to work on inside the enclosure. If it is a vertical laminar airflow, then the work surface may have holes in it (or be a hard net-like structure) to let the air pass through. You can put your work apparatus on this surface and carry out sensitive tasks like tissue culture, electronic wafer formation, bacterial culture, and more.
The material of the work surface is often stainless steel too, for similar reasons as above. It is resistant to biological contamination, it is easy to disinfect, and it does not require any special coating. It is also sturdy and will support mostly any lab equipment you can use in a microbiology lab.
The pre filter or filter pad is the first line of defense against impure air, in a laminar airflow cabinet. It sits in touch with the outside environment directly, generally behind a mesh or net or grill, either on top of the cabinet or below the work surface facing the front.
The pre-filter is basically a large piece of washable sheet, folded a few times over to make it thick. It has large fibrous pores that can trap suspended particles in air about 5 microns or bigger. It acts as the primary filter that scrubs out the air by interception method of filtering.
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The actual machine responsible for the airflow, the fan or blower sucks the air in through the pre-filter and presses it through the HEPA filter. It sits in between these filter pads and controls the airflow. It can come in different shapes and sizes depending upon your model, and in different powers as well. It makes a fair amount of noise while running.
The most important part of a laminar airflow cabinet is the HEPA (High Efficiency Particulate Air) filter that sits right next to the Enclosure, separated only by a grill or mesh. If the device is horizontal airflow type, then the HEPA filter will be at the back of the device; and if it is vertical airflow type then it will be on top of the enclosure. This filter acts as the final filter that cleans out the air as completely as reasonably possible, ridding the air of particles and microbes down to 0.3 microns in size. It works in the following three mechanisms:
While the HEPA filter does supply quite well-filtered air, it isn’t completely sterile. Microbes less than 0.3 microns in size get passed through the filter, and some outside air does get in somehow. Even the surfaces of the enclosure and work area can have microbes stuck to them. To clean them out, we need something more than just air pressure ‒ we need a killer ray.
The UV lamp supplies just this. It radiates ultraviolet light, which is carcinogenic in nature. It causes cells to grow unnaturally and destroys living protein. Water purifiers use the same idea, actually. The lamp not only sterilizes the air and the surfaces inside the enclosure, but you can also put your glassware and plasticware like beakers, test tubes, petri dishes etc. on the workbench to get them sterilized.
The manufacturer generally puts a fluorescent or LED tube inside the enclosure on the top surface so that you can see what you are doing in the box.
The controls for the fan, the UV lamp, and the light switches and knobs should be outside on a single control pad. Sometimes, the maker may provide a foot switch to control the airflow while working.
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There are mainly two kinds of laminar hoods depending upon the direction of the airflow ‒ vertical and horizontal.
In this more common, compact type, the air flow is from top to bottom. The filters and the fan/blower is mounted on top of the device. The air can flow out the front of the enclosure after hitting the work surface, or the work surface can be perforated to let the air pass through and feed back up top into the primary filter.
Since the air does not hit the user directly, this type of cabinets are taken as a safer bet for the user and you can perform potentially dangerous experiments in a vertical laminar airflow. However, it is not suitable for running while working, since the air hits the apparatus directly through the open top and can contaminate the samples.
These are rather large and specious, and mount the HEPA filter at the back of the cabinet. The airflow is from back to front directly at the user, and can’t operate without the front glass sash open. The pre-filter sits flush with the front wall of the box underneath the work surface and sucks air from the front. The blower is also at the bottom portion.
Since the aireflow directly hits the user, the horizontal laminar airflow cabinets are not suitable for potentially dangerous operations. However, where protecting the sample is mandatory and airflow has to be provided while working, these work best since these provide more laminar air layers tangent to the open sides of labware.
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A biochemistry lab is the most normal place to find a laminar airflow. All tissue and microbe cultures are sensitive to things floating in the air and so they have to be protected this way. Also, in the pharmaceutical industry, the labs use these devices commonly to work with medicines and cultures to test them on. The pharmacy factories also use larger versions of similar devices working on the same concept.
In the electronics industry, things are getting smaller every day and now they have to work with microscopic items and circuits. Naturally, they are sensitive to dust particles in air which are generally many times bigger than the component. The effect is like a rock falling on a pencil. To prevent this, most electronics labs use horizontal laminar workflow cabinets (since there is nothing to protect the user from).
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A Laminar airflow cabinet is an extremely useful lab furniture and instrument when you need to do some work so very sensitive that even outside air can damage it. It provides a sterile, clean atmosphere inside the cabinet where you can work with sensitive materials like tissue culture or electronic wafers.
Comparatively cheap and portable, laminar air flow cabinets are light in weight and movable, and are eco-friendly as well. But do make sure you follow the operating manual to the letter, and wear proper protective lab clothing while operating the hood. When buying one, choose the vertical or horizontal type carefully depending upon the nature of your work.