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babun14 ☆ 2009-02-02 09:13 (6353 d 23:36 ago) (edited on 2009-02-02 09:48) Posting: # 3169 Views: 4,246 |
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Dear members, Can you please tell me why the deep freezer temperature requirement is usually only -20 or -70 degree centigrade for sample storage in bioanalytical facility. Why not we go beyond say -100 or below for sample storage . Thanks Bani |
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Helmut ★★★ ![]() Vienna, Austria, 2009-02-02 13:37 (6353 d 19:12 ago) @ babun14 Posting: # 3170 Views: 3,551 |
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Dear Bani! ❝ Can you please tell me why the deep freezer temperature requirement is usually only -20 or -70 degree centigrade for sample storage in bioanalytical facility. Easy. You may obtain –20 ℃ with a commercical household freezer (although you have to set up a system for documenting the temperature and an emergency system on your own). Lab deep freezers come in two specs: –40 ℃ and –70 ℃. The latter ones offer the possibility of a CO2 backup. They are nasty energy consuming beasts (1 kW/h). There’s a rule of thumb which temperature to start with: If your drug is an ester, you most likely have to go with –70 ℃ (because esterases are still active at –20 ℃). You have to check during method validation, which temperature ensures long-term stability. ❝ Why not we go beyond say -100 or below for sample storage. Even for most biologicals –70 ℃ is enough. There are simply no freezers available reliably going below –70 ℃. If your compound is not stable at -70 ℃, you will have to go to –196 ℃ (liquid nitrogen). — Dif-tor heh smusma 🖖🏼 Довге життя Україна! ![]() Helmut Schütz ![]() The quality of responses received is directly proportional to the quality of the question asked. 🚮 Science Quotes |
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babun14 ☆ 2009-02-03 11:59 (6352 d 20:50 ago) @ babun14 Posting: # 3176 Views: 3,432 |
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Dear HS, Thanks. Bani ![]() |

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