Cylinder-shaped, calibrated glass containers that fit into centrifuge slots for the analysis and separation of various materials.
Gray top tubes with sodium fluoride/potassium oxalate additive should not be spun in the centrifuge as it can alter test results by causing hemolysis. These tubes are usually used for glucose testing and need to be kept upright to prevent mixing with cells.
Typically, blood collection tubes with anticoagulants such as EDTA, heparin, or citrate are spun in the centrifuge to separate the blood components. The specific type of tube used depends on the tests being performed and the desired blood components needed for analysis.
Hollow tubes are cylindrical structures that have empty spaces or cavities inside them. They are commonly used in various applications, such as piping, structural support, and biological systems. Examples include straws, blood vessels, and plumbing pipes.
To use a gravity disc in a centrifuge, place the disc at the bottom of the centrifuge tube before adding your sample. The disc's density should be higher than the sample to help separate components based on their density during centrifugation. When the centrifuge spins, the disc will assist in pushing particles to settle at the bottom of the tube based on their relative densities.
speed
A Centrifuge Swing-out Rotor is a part of a centrifuge which attaches to the motor and holds the sample tubes. A swing-out, as opposed to a Fixed Angle rotor, has holders that move from vertical to horizontal as the centrifuge speeds up.
A centrifuge has holes to insert the centrifuge tubes in, a cap to secure the tubes inside, and a lid to protect both the samples and experimenter in case of malfunction. There is also typically a way to set the centrifuge speed and a power switch to turn the centrifuge on and off.
A centrifuge tube is a tool that is used in laboratory research. They are tapered tubes that come in a variety of sizes and are made of plastic or glass.
Gray top tubes with sodium fluoride/potassium oxalate additive should not be spun in the centrifuge as it can alter test results by causing hemolysis. These tubes are usually used for glucose testing and need to be kept upright to prevent mixing with cells.
Add tubes to your centrifuge basket arranged as factors of the total number of spaces. For instance, if you have a twelve hole centrifuge, you can add tubes in every second hole, for six tubes in total; in every third hole for four tubes in total, in every fourth hole for three tubes in total; or every sixth hole for two tubes. You can combine these factors one way to place five tubes in your centrifuge basket - a balanced array of two and a balanced array of three tubes. As well as that, you can arrange the gaps in your centrifuge basket the same way, so you can have five , four, three or two tubes left out of a twelve hole basket. In that way it is possible to place two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten or twelve tubes safely in a twelve hole centrifuge basket.
The bottom as it is more dense
A serofuge is a small centrifuge specifically designed to separate serum from cells and to complete blood cell washing procedures. Like a centrifuge, a serofuge has holes to insert the centrifuge tubes in, a lid to protect both the samples and experimenter in case of malfunction, and a way to set the centrifuge speed and way to turn the centrifuge on and off.
Clinical centrifuge are devices used for clinical applications like blood collection tubes. These laboratory equipment are driven by motor and spins liquid samples at high speed.
Yes, lavender top tubes are often used for hematology testing and should be spun in a centrifuge following the manufacturer's instructions to separate the blood components effectively.
Typically, blood collection tubes with anticoagulants such as EDTA, heparin, or citrate are spun in the centrifuge to separate the blood components. The specific type of tube used depends on the tests being performed and the desired blood components needed for analysis.
To achieve separation. What were you putting into the centrifuge? I know in Biochem usually centrifugation is a preparative step performed to isolate a single organelle of a cell. But centrifugation can also be analyical, for instance if you wanted to measure the density of whatever substance is in the tube.
Different laboratories may use different color codes for test tubes depending on their specific protocols. However, a common color coding for test tubes used in centrifuges is as follows: red for serum tubes, lavender for EDTA tubes, green for heparin tubes, and blue for citrate tubes.